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The Boonshoft Museum of Discovery (abbreviated as Boonshoft) is a children's museum, science and technology center and zoo in Dayton, Ohio, United States that focuses on science and natural history. Exhibits include an extensive natural history collection as well as maintaining a collection of live animals native to Ohio and abroad.
Historical farm, company museum, open-air village Boonshoft Museum of Discovery: Dayton Montgomery Southwest Science Children's museum of science, includes Apollo Observatory: Bowling Green State University Fine Art Galleries Bowling Green: Wood: Northwest Art Includes Dorothy Uber Bryan, Willard Wankelman and Hiroko Nakamoto Galleries [26]
Ashland County Historical Society Museum; Boonshoft Museum of Discovery, Dayton; Cincinnati Museum of Natural History & Science, Cincinnati; Greater Cleveland Aquarium, Cleveland; Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland; Hefner Museum of Natural History; Karl Limper Geology Museum, Oxford; Killbuck Valley Museum, Killbuck
The concerts are held nightly beginning Aug. 30, 2024, the day after the EPCOT Food and Wine Festival begins. There are three concerts each night: 5:30 p.m., 6:45 p.m. and 8 p.m.
Apollo Observatory is an astronomical observatory owned by Boonshoft Museum of Discovery and operated by the Miami Valley Astronomical Society at Boonshoft Museum of Discovery. The observatory is located at Boonshoft Museum of Discovery in Dayton, Ohio, United States.
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The museum first opened in 1956 [2] [3] and started as a room in the Wesleyan Conservatory with a few activities for children. In 1964, the museum moved locations with the construction of a gallery and workshop. A year later, a planetarium would be added as a new wing of the museum. A 1980 addition included most of the museum's infrastructure.
The museum began as the Boston Society of Natural History in 1830, founded by a collection of men who wished to share scientific interests. Their first meeting was held on February 9, 1830 with seven original members in attendance: Walter Channing, Benjamin D. Greene, George Hayward, John Ware, Edward Brooks, Amos Binney, and George B. Emerson.