Top 10 Cape Cod Museums
1. Chatham Railroad Museum is an excellent look at the history of the railroad. This museum houses everything from model trains to telegraph equipment and a fully restored early 1900s wooden caboose. Walking around and taking in the sights is free, so don't miss this one on your Cape Cod vacation.
2. Falmouth Museums on the Green—This museum consists of two eighteenth-century houses and offers visitors a look into 18th-century Cape Cod life. Highlights of both houses include colonial furnishings and kitchens, a whaling exhibit, and America the Beautiful author and Falmouth native Katharine Lee Bates.
3. John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum—Kennedy visited Cape Cod quite often, and this museum compiles his days there. The JFK Hyannis Museum chronicles the day John F. Kennedy spent on the Cape through videos, photos, and oral histories spanning almost 30 years.
4. Cape Cod Museum of Natural History - This enormous museum has 17,000 square feet of exhibit space on an 80-acre site surrounded by 300 acres of conservation land, all dedicated to the natural history of Cape Cod. You will find walking trails, nature tours, aquariums, and a museum store and library. This is a great outdoor activity on your Cape Cod vacation.
5. Sandwich Glass Museum—In the early 19th century, Sandwich transitioned from an agricultural community to a center for art glass and glassmaking. The Sandwich Glass Museum features locally crafted decorative glassware from the 1820s to the early 1900s and information on the area's glassmaking history. They also have demonstrations.
6. New England Fire and History Museum—This museum features all sorts of fire equipment, including historic engines, equipment, memorabilia, and exhibits like a village blacksmith and apothecary shop. Again, this is another museum with demonstrations, and you can even climb aboard the trucks.
7. Aptucxet Trading Post Museum—This is a recreation of a 1600s trading post on the real-life site where pilgrims traded with Dutch settlers so many years ago and the local Wampanoag Indian tribe. 17th-century herb and wildflower gardens are beautiful in full bloom in spring and summer.
8. Thornton W. Burgess Museum—This museum is an 18th-century home once owned by Burgess's Aunt Arabella. Burgess wrote famous children's books like Peter Cotton Tail and still holds some of his original work. The grounds also feature a swan and duck pond, an herb garden, and a gift shop stocked with many Burgess books.
9. Swift Daily House and Tool Museum—This tool museum features hundreds of unusual items in a bow-roof house built in 1741. The house contains many artifacts from daily life in colonial times, such as clothing, china, furniture, and other household items. For any history buff, this is a must-see on your Cape Cod vacation.
10. Centerville Historical Museum—This museum has something for everyone. From military artifacts and a Civil War display to children's toys and dolls, from a maritime gallery to a colonial kitchen, from a Victorian parlor to a 19th-century classroom, this museum is a true celebration of Cape Cod's history.
On your Cape Cod vacation, be sure to take advantage of all of these fantastic museums. Whether you're a history buff or just curious about where Cape Cod came from, you can't miss these attractions. Most of them are free for admission, so there's no reason you can't have a great time and get a little education.
What to See and Do In Cape Cod, MA - There are plenty of places to see on Cape Cod, but where are the best places to visit Cape Cod? If you like driving, you're in luck, because the best sightseeing on Cape Cod is spread out through all of the towns, not just in any one town. Some great things on Cape Cod include Falmouth, Provincetown, and Chatham.