Museums
Museums

Bloomsburg Children’s Museum

Bloomsburg Children’s Museum
The Bloomsburg Children’s Museum offers a diverse range of sustainable and engaging learning opportunities for children of all ages. Through year-round interactive exhibits, carefully curated programming, and active community outreach initiatives, the museum strives to ignite curiosity and inspire exploration in the sciences, arts, and humanities.

Jackson Mansion

Jackson Mansion
Explore the rich history and architecture of the Jackson Mansion in Berwick, Pennsylvania. Learn about the Jackson family, Berwick's past, and the mansion's significance in local heritage.

Joseph Priestly House

Joseph Priestly House
The Joseph Priestley House is a historic site that preserves and interprets the contributions and significance to American history of Joseph Priestley. As a National Historic Landmark and National Historic Chemical Landmark, the site features Priestley’s manor house with its laboratory. In the nearby Pond Building can be found the Joseph Priestley Timeline, a series of panels that present accomplishments during different periods.

Lewisburg Children’s Museum

Lewisburg Children’s Museum
The Lewisburg Children’s Museum inspires learning, imagination, and play, through interactive, enriching experiences in a safe, accessible environment to all children and their families. Their vision is to nurture lifelong learning and encourage children and families to explore, create, and grow.

Mifflinburg Buggy Museum

Mifflinburg Buggy Museum
The Mifflinburg Buggy Museum Association, Inc. is an educational and historical organization, with a mission to preserve for public appreciation, the original Heiss Coach Works. Heiss Coach Works is a small industrial site, representative of Pennsylvania and the United States at the turn of the 20th century. This is to interpret the museum complex as an example of the region's buggy manufacturing heritage, as well as its social and economic culture.

Montgomery House

Montgomery House
The Montgomery House was built by William Montgomery, the founder of Danville. It was later purchased by the Danville Elks, and deeded to Montour County, to be used as a museum for the preservation of local history.