AAF Tank Museum -
The largest Tank & Cavalry collection in the world. Dating from 1509 to present. Prepare
yourself for an awesome adventure into military history.
The Museum of the Confederacy
- A private, nonprofit institution that maintains the
world's largest and most comprehensive collection of military, political
and domestic artifacts and art associated with the period of the
Confederacy, 1861-1865.
Exchange
Hotel Civil War Museum - The Exchange Hotel Civil War
Museum stands silent watch over a rich past that intertwines Civil War
medicine, military actions of the Army and the mighty railroads of
Virginia. The museum offers an unique building with a experience through
time of Gordonsville's personal history through medical, military, town,
and hotel history exhibits.
Poplar
Forest - Tour Jefferson's octagonal
retreat and see restoration and archaeology in progress. In summer, experience the
hands-on history tent, which features Jefferson-era activities including
brickmaking, building a bucket, and writing with a quill pen.
Albemarle
County Historical Society - The Albemarle County
Historical Society works to nurture and promote an awareness and
appreciation of the history of Charlottesville and Albemarle County
through exhibits, walking tours, publications, and other programs.
Ash
Lawn-Highland - Ash Lawn-Highland is an historic house museum, 535-acre working farm, and performing arts site in Albermarle County, Virginia. President James Monroe and his wife, Elizabeth Kortright Monroe of New York, owned Ash Lawn-Highland from 1793 to 1826 and made it their official residence from 1799 to 1823.
Scottsville
Museum - Scottsville Museum brings the town's history
to life, from its beginnings as an 18th century James River settlement to
its shining era as a bustling 19th century river and canal port.
Additionally the Museum depicts Scottsville as a center of Civil War
activity through its re-emergence as a thriving community in the 20th
century.
Virginia
Discovery Museum - Located on the east end of the
Downtown Mall in Charlottesville, Virginia, the Virginia Discovery Museum
is a hands-on children's museum, with exhibits on the arts, sciences,
humanities, history and nature. Families are encouraged to explore the
Museum together -- visitors of all ages are free to touch, play and
explore. Learning and fun are the goal. Creative play is the way!
The
Children’s Museum of Richmond (CMoR) - Experience one of the East Coast’s most exciting, innovative children’s museums! Learn through interactive play – sit in an eagle’s nest, explore a cave, tinker in the Inventor’s Lab, create an artistic masterpiece, AND MORE!
Age-appropriate areas for toddlers to grade 5. Stroller rental. Nursing area.
Museum Shop. Free parking. GREAT FAMILY FUN!
|
|
Old City Cemetery -
The Old City Cemetery was established 1806. It is a Virginia
Historic Landmark on the National Register of Historic Places. It is the
oldest public cemetery in Virginia still in operation. You can learn
Genealogy or see the beautiful Gardens or both!
Peaks
of Otter - Peaks of Otter were formed by three mountains
positioned in a triangular pattern, Sharp Top Mountain (3,875 feet), Flat
Top Mountain (4,001 feet), and Harkening Hill (3,372 feet). A beautiful
mountain lake rests at the triangle's center.
Paramount's
Kings Dominion - Paramount's Kings Dominion is a 400
acres theme park located 20 miles north of Richmond. The park offers rides,
a water park, stage shows, and lots of entertainment for the entire family.
Danville
Science Center - Danville Science Center allows you to
discover the secrets of how things work. Explore the impact of science on
your life. They offer hands-on exhibits that fill the exciting center that
is fun for the whole family.
University
of Virginia Art Museum - The University of Virginia Art Museum in the Thomas H. Bayly Building exhibits art from around the world dating from ancient times to the present day. In addition to its permanent collection, the Museum presents an ongoing schedule of changing exhibitions, accompanied by related programs and publications.
Monticello
- Monticello was the home of Thomas Jefferson, third
president of the United States. Explore Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's
mountaintop home, gardens, and plantation.
Maymont
- Maymont was the 100-acre Victorian country estate of Major
James H. and Sallie May Dooley. They feature a house museum, formal gardens,
native wildlife, nature center, a carriage collection, and children´s farm.
A favorite is the expansive 100-acre tract of parkland and gardens, still
very much as the Dooleys left it.
Agecroft
Hall - For hundreds of years, Agecroft Hall was the
distinguished home of England's Langley and Dauntesey families. From
Elizabethan England, to the banks of the James. Built in England about 500
years ago, Agecroft Hall now overlooks Virginia's James River.
University
of Virginia
Art Museum - The University of Virginia Art Museum in the
Thomas H. Bayly Building exhibits art from around the world dating from
ancient times to the present day. In addition to its permanent collection,
the Museum presents an ongoing schedule of changing exhibitions, accompanied
by related programs and publications.
Edgar
Allan Poe Museum - The Poe Museum provides a retreat into
early nineteenth century Richmond where Edgar Allan Poe lived and worked.
The museum features the life and career of Edgar Allan Poe by documenting
his accomplishments with pictures, relics, and verse and focusing on his
many years in Richmond.
|