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Museums
Delaware Art Museum
2301 Kentmere Parkway Wilmington, DE 19806 302-571-9590 The new Delaware Art Museum features expanded galleries displaying 19th- and 20th-century American art and the Brandywine Valley’s first sculpture park.
Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts
The DCCA, at 33,000 square feet, houses seven galleries, one high-tech auditorium, a classroom, museum store, & twenty-six artists’ studios. In addition to its annual schedule of over 30 exhibitions of regionally, nationally and internationally recognized artists. the DCCA has a long-standing commitment to community outreach efforts.
Admission charged; under age 2 free. Explore
an African watering hole, look a leopard in the eyes, journey across the Great
Barrier Reef, and discover life-sized dinosaurs. Experience dynamic traveling
exhibitions and special events; attend distinguished educational programs and
explore the interactive Discovery Room.
Delaware Sports Museum & Hall of Fame Spring-Fall Hours Tuesdays through Saturdays from Noon to 5PM Admission charged; Under 12 Free with paying adult. See artifacts and memorabilia representing over 200 inductees including Olympic gold metal winners and members of the National Baseball & Football Halls of Fame. The Delaware Sports Museum recognizes accomplishments of Delaware sports figures. Exhibits trace contributions by athletes, coaches, administrators, officials, sportswriters and broadcasters to Delaware history. Computers allow you direct access to inductee biographies and other sports hall of fame websites.
Delaware History Center
(302) 655-7161 noon to 4 p.m. Mon.-Fri., and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The
History Center campus dominates the 500 block of Market Street, Wilmington, in
the heart of the downtown cultural district. It is comprised of the Delaware
History Museum, Grandmas Attic Kids Museum, Old Town Hall, Willingtown Square
historic park, and the Historical Society of Delaware Research Library. Built in 1698 by children of Swedish Lutherans who came over on the Tall Ship Kalmar Nyckel. It is the nation's oldest church building still standing as originally built and in regular use for worship. An Episcopal parish since 1791, the church's graveyard (dating from 1638) is the final resting place of more than 15,000 men, women and children from a wide variety of religious traditions. The church property includes the Hendrickson House, a Swedish stone farmhouse built on Crum Creek in 1690 and moved to this site in 1959. The church is close by the Kalmar Nyckel Shipyard and Ft. Christina Park, where the Kalmar Nyckel's Swedish, Finnish, Dutch and German settlers landed and -- along with Anthoni "the Black Swede," a freeman from the Caribbean -- built the original fort and the first log cabins in America.
Winterthur Museum & Country Estate
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Wilmington Travel Deals
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