The museum contains artefacts relating to the movement, and arranges a changing programme of exhibitions and other events.
[2] The chapel was altered in 1832, its entrance front dating from this time, when the west gallery was also installed.
The chapel has a symmetrical gabled entrance front, having a central doorway with a moulded surround and a fanlight.
The chapel is approached by a flight of stone steps, and in front of it is a wall surmounted by cast iron railings.
It is a small pipe organ with a single manual and three stops, and is operated by a foot pump.
The monument was designed by John Walford, and is built in ashlar, with an inscription in lead lettering.
The monument consists of a square plinth, with stepped buttresses on the corners that are surmounted by small finials in the form of obelisks.
The museum contains a pulpit used by Hugh Bourne and by William Clowes, a fellow founder of the movement, which was originally in a private house in Tunstall.