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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, BuffaloBud said:

Air Force Museum - Dayton

Pro Football Hall of Fame - Canton

 

Good call.

The Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola is fantastic as well.

The iconic O'Club of Naval Aviation was the Cubi Point, (Philippines) club.

It was home to Seventh Fleet, (Pacific) aviators when in port.

When the base was closed, they packed up a good deal of the interior and put it on an aircraft carrier and brought it back to the US, and is now at the P'cola museum.

It is really cool.

Many a  night in that O'club in the PI, some not completely remembered. 

Anyway, a fantastic museum in Pensacola, birthplace of Naval Aviation.

 

Edited by sherpa
Posted

ROM - Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.......this museum is excellent stuff, man. They tend to change things up every couple of months to showcase new things. If you have a full 12 hours or even a weekend free, it is worth its weight in gold to visit.

 

Ottawa Museum - Ottawa, Ontario........i was so looking forward to this museum when i visited Ottawa and it was trash. I was through the whole exhibit in about 1 hour, there really wasn't much to see and it was a huge complete let down.

Posted

Been to museums in Cleveland, NYC, Pittsburgh, Chicago and small ones out west so this one's gonna sound weird but the best family museum I've ever gone to is the Grand Rapids Public Museum.  If you're ever stuck around Grand Rapids, I highly recommend it.

 

They do an amazing job with their displays with a wide variety of items gathered from history and donors around that side of the state.  Art, fashion, paleontology, games, natural history, engineering history, war history.  It focuses on Western Michigan but has worldwide items donated by wealthy in the area.

 

They recreated an entire street from the 1890's with all the shops that you walk into to see the appropriate artifacts.  Aquarium tank with several young sturgeon from the Grand River.  A large finnback whale skeleton a local Dr. had bought in Florida and displayed in his front yard for a year before donating to the museum.😂

 

Interesting collection that keeps you from getting bored for 2-3 hours.

Posted

The Cleveland Museum of Art was a surprise as me and wife went to Cleveland solely to see Rock and Roll HOF and had some extra time to kill and stopped in.

 

The Art Institute of Chicago, it felt like I was walking into a movie as an 80s kid iykyk.

 

Of course The Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC is a must see for anybody. I didn't get to spend a lot of time but it's still one of our country's best.

 

As Buffalo native gotta say adore the Albright Knox but haven't been since the rebuild but definitely will.

Posted

Fort Niagara when I was a youth.  Loved the trip, but the history of it literally got me hooked  with American history in that era.

 

Another museum,  the Ann Frank House in Amsterdam, Holland. I went there when I was on leave in the Air Force.  This museum 

has had a profound impact on me! When the tour guide took us up the stairs where the Frank family stayed, I could only

IMAGINE the terror the Frank family had as those Nazi troopers rushed in on that fateful night!!!

    You can still see the pencil marks on the wall where Mr Frank measured the kids height each year. And when our group were

there, listening to the tour guide, he church bell sound because it was twelve noon. That's the same church bell that Ann wrote 

about in her diary, and how it gave her inspiration and calmness in such terrible circumstances!!

 

   That's my 2 cents.

 

 

Go Bills!!!

Posted

Art: Prado, Madrid (Spain). I was there about 50 years ago, and I still remember Velazquez' "Las Meninas".

Modern Art: MoMA, New York.

Both Dali museums are worthwhile, the one in St. Petersburg (Florida) and the one in Figueres (Spain).

Tram Museum ("Strassenbahnmuseum") Hannover (Germany). The special attraction: They let you drive a tram (20 minutes, $40; 1 hour, $110).

https://www.tram-museum.de/besucher/strassenbahn-selbst-fahren/

And finally, right here in Lubbock, the National Ranching Heritage Center, where they have collected farm buildings from all over Texas from 1780 to 1950.

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