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Museums
Showcase County’s Rich History. Tour the
Jonathan Hager House Museum, home of the city’s
founder, and view a portrayal of life during that
time period.
Hager House
Situated in Hagerstown’s City Park, and built in 1739 by city founder Jonathan
Hager, the Hager House is styled in German tradition. Today the Hager House is
completely outfitted with authentic furnishings of the period depicting a life
long since forgotten. Older than the country itself, not many American cities
can present the completely restored homes of their founders. Hagerstown has such
a treasure —stepping into the Hager House is like taking a walk through
the past.
Hagerstown Roundhouse
The Hagerstown
Roundhouse Museum is dedicated to the
preservation of our railroad hertiage and to the men
and women who worked for the railroads and made Hagerstown
the “Hub City”. The Museum is filled with
artifacts, photos, railroad art, model railroads, a
library, a roster of Western Maryland employees, and
a gift shop. There is something for everyone at the
Museum. There are trains for kids to run, and specials
events include the Trains of Christmas and Railroad
Heritage Days. Open on Fri, Sat, & Sun from 1 to
5PM. Admission is $3.50 for Adults, $.50 for children
4 through 12 years old, and 3 years and under is free.
Miller House and Gardens
This fine old brick edifice at 135 West Washington
Street in Hagerstown is the headquarters of the Washington
County Historical Society. Research indicates that
the main structure of the house was built for William
Price, a prominent young attorney, who acquired the
property in 1823. The mansion is a typical town house
of the late Federal period. In the entrance hall
is the original hanging stairway rising in a graceful
curve to the third floor. There are several bedrooms
with furnishings from the 1850’s - 1870’s.
Exhibits include papers and historic items of the
French and Indian War, the Revolutionary War and
the War of 1812. The
Miller House Library contains
many early documents and church records of Washington
County. The garden is gradually being developed and
has been created as a memorial to the late Victor
Davis Miller, III, President of the Historical Society
from 1966-68.
Museum of Fine Arts - a True Hidden
Treasure
The Washington
County Museum of Fine Arts has
a long and impressive tradition of cultural leadership
in the Cumberland Valley region providing residents
and visitors access to an outstanding permanent collection.
The Museum’s
professional standards of excellence in collection, exhibition
and interpretation have earned it the coveted accreditation
of the American Association of Museums (AAM), an honor
extended to fewer than ten percent of the nation’s
museums.The museum has a collection of American paintings,
Old Masters and European works, Oriental and African
art. This extensive collection also includes drawings,
prints and sculpture from the eighteenth century to the
present.
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