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new Seeking volunteer docents for 4th Grade History Tours.

Seeking new volunteers, training sessions in progress.

Education Department
Museum tours
About Sharlot Hall Museum

HOURS
Monday - Saturday
10 am - 4 pm
Sunday
Noon - 4 pm

Library and Archives
Tuesday - Friday
Noon - 4 pm
Saturday
10 am - 2 pm

Closed Thursdays beginning 1/22.

Closed New Year's, Thanksgiving and Christmas Days.

WHERE WE ARE

415 West Gurley Street
Prescott, Arizona 86301
MapQuest
Easy-print detailed map


ADMISSION
Free with membership
$5 adults
Under 18 free

Arizona Memory Project
The Arizona Memory Project will allow us to make available on-line even more digital photos, maps, and, for the first time, audio archives.
Order photo reproductions

MUSEUM PROGRAMS
Arizona Heritage Project
Connecting students & Communities
Civic Tourism
A new approach to economic development in Arizona

Fort Whipple Museum

Building 11
Veterans Administration campus.
500 N Hwy 89
Prescott, Arizona 86301
Hours:
Thursday - Saturday
10 am to 4 pm


Google

    Living History “The Arizona History Adventure”

Enjoy stepping back in time with living history characters in the John C. Fremont House and the Territorial Governor's Mansion. Visit with living history interpreters in the Pioneer Living Area and the Frontier Trades Building. Saturday, January 10 from 10 to 3. The Arizona History Adventure is sponsored in part by a We The People grant from the Arizona Humanities Council.


Blue Rose Theater 2009 Season Opening Party!
The Wild and Wooly West featuring the High Mountain Chordsmen. The best of barbershop harmony, and a morning workshop to get up close and personal to the performers and their music. Saturday, January 24 at 2 and 7:30 pm, and a 2 hour workshop starting at 10 am. Tickets available at the Museum front desk.
View the entire 2009 Season schedule.


Now on exhibit:


Water: Quest for the Solution

Water is a serious subject. An unlimited and endless supply of it can no longer be taken for granted, especially in the arid Southwest. But, as the past demonstrates, water for desert dwellers continues to be an important and fascinating part of Arizona’s survival. Sharlot Hall Museum’s newest exhibit examines the history of water management in Arizona, and bring to life the story of this critical and ever-changing natural resource. Through April 15.

On Sunday, January 25: Lorayne Meltzer, co-director of the Kino Bay Center, will address the environmental, social and economic impacts that de-watering the Colorado River has had on the Delta Region in Mexico. Her presentation will address the relationship of the river, over time, with the Gulf of California. 1:00 PM in the Museum Center Gallery.