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Discovery Depot Children's Museum: Galesburg: Knox: Western: Children's: Homepage: Dixon Telegraph Museum: Dixon: Lee: Northern Illinois: Media: History of the newspaper and its role in the history of Dixon [22] Dollhouses Then & Now: Quincy: Adams: Western: Toy: Over 70 vintage furnished doll houses from the 1920s on [1] [23] [24] Donald E ...
Second oldest children's museum in the U.S.; recognized as LEED Gold certified by the U.S. Green Building Council; founded in 1913 Bronzeville Children's Museum: Chicago: Illinois: Only African-American children's museum in the U.S. Bronx Children's Museum: The Bronx: New York: Founded in 2005. Brooklyn Children's Museum: Brooklyn: New York
Children's Discovery Museum (VTA), a light-rail station next to the museum; Hawaii Children's Discovery Center, Honolulu, Hawaii; Kauai Children's Discovery Museum, a defunct museum in Kauai, Hawaii; Children's Discovery Museum, Normal, Illinois; Discovery Center Museum, Rockford, Illinois; part of the National Space Grant College and ...
Children's Discovery Museum, 2008. The Children's Discovery Museum in uptown Normal provides hands-on exhibits, classes and programs for children. The museum has three floors of exhibits including a two-story mesh climber for children to climb to the third floor and a 2,000-square-foot (190 m 2) agriculture exhibit called AgMazing. The museum ...
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Bess Bower Dunn Museum, formerly known as the Lake County Discovery Museum, is an interactive museum of history, art, and popular culture located in Libertyville, Illinois. The museum was established in 1976 in Wauconda, IL and sited in Lakewood Forest Preserve as part of the larger Lake County Forest Preserve District .
The State of Illinois selected Normal as the site of the home in May 1867 and set up three temporary facilities in Bloomington and Springfield to serve the children during construction. The Illinois Soldiers' Orphans' Home (ISOH) opened its doors on June 17, 1869 with 180 children in residence and one main building. Mrs.
The Illinois Soldiers' and Sailors' Children's School opened in 1869 as a home for the orphaned children of soldiers who had died in war. The Children's Village was built in 1930-31 as housing for children aged 3–8, as the school aimed to divide its housing by age. C.