558 Best Sights in USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in USA - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Edge of the Cedars State Park Museum

Fodor's Choice

Behind what is one of the nation's foremost museums dedicated to the Ancestral Puebloan culture, an interpretive trail leads to a village that they once inhabited. Portions have been partially excavated, and visitors can climb down a ladder into a 1,000-year-old ceremonial room called a kiva. The museum displays a variety of pots, baskets, spear points, and other rare artifacts. There's even a sash made from the colorful feathers of a scarlet macaw, a bird native to Mexico or Central America, which proves the vast distances indigenous trade routes spanned. 

Eveleth-Crafts-Sheridan Historical House and Moosehead Lumbermen's Museum

Fodor's Choice

A mile from downtown Greenville, the 1890s Victorian Eveleth-Crafts-Sheridan Historical House has changed little since the last resident of a prominent Greenville family lived here, though renovations to some rooms over the decades prior reveal evolving 20th-century lifestyle trends, adding interest to the delightfully guided tours. Each year there’s a new changing exhibit within the period rooms. The original kitchen, state of the art back in the day, is a highlight; cooks will also savor the collection of old utensils and kitchen items in a basement gallery. Rare South American oak furniture and wainscoting match in the dining room. You can even check out the attic. In the carriage house, Moosehead Lumbermen's Museum showcases the region's storied logging history. A highlight is the 30-foot bateau used on log drives until the 1960s. Tools of the trade are displayed, from axes and saws to Peavys, a pole with a hook used to move logs downriver. In the barn are exhibits on outdoor subjects like Maine Warden Service flight rescues and wildlife—check out the bobcat, moose, and caribou mounts. On the large grounds, a sunken garden invites.

444 Pritham Ave., Greenville, ME, 04442, USA
207-695–2909
Sight Details
Eveleth-Crafts-Sheridan Historical House, $12; Moosehead Lumbermen's Museum, by donation
Closed mid-Oct.–mid-June. Eveleth-Crafts-Sheridan Historical House, closed Sat.–Tues. mid-June–mid-Oct., Moosehead Lumbermen's Museum, closed Sat.–Mon. mid-June–mid-Oct.

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Explore Navajo Interactive Museum

Fodor's Choice

The tribe operates this enlightening 7,000-square-foot museum, which is set inside a geodesic dome–shape structure that is meant to recall a traditional Navajo hogan. Inside the dome is a vast trove of artifacts, photos, artwork, and memorabilia. One of the more poignant exhibits tells of the infamous "Long Walk" of 1864, when the U.S. military forced the Navajo to leave their native lands and march to an encampment at Fort Sumner, New Mexico, where they were confined for more than four years. Admission also includes entry to the small Navajo Code Talkers Memorial Museum in the back of the Tuba City Trading Post next door. Both facilities are adjacent to the NavajoLand Hotel (formerly the Quality Inn Navajo Nation).

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Field Museum

South Loop Fodor's Choice

More than 400,000 square feet of exhibit space fill this gigantic museum, which explores cultures and environments from around the world. Interactive displays examine such topics as the secrets of Egyptian mummies, the art and innovations of people living in the Ancient Americas, and the evolution of life on Earth. Originally funded by Chicago retailer Marshall Field, the museum was founded in 1893 to hold material gathered for the World's Columbian Exposition; its current neoclassical home opened in 1921. The museum holds the world's best dinosaur collections but the star of the show is 65-million-year-old "Sue," the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil ever found. Don't hesitate to take toddlers to the Field. In the Crown Family PlayLab, kids two to six years old can play house in a re-created pueblo and compare their footprints with a dinosaur's.

Foss Waterway Seaport

Fodor's Choice

Set along the Thea Foss waterfront, this history museum in a turn-of-the-20th-century structure—with a dramatic modern glass facade—is easily reached from downtown via a walk along the promenade that flanks the harbor. Inside the enormous timber building, the museum examines the city's waterfront heritage, including the history of Tacoma's brisk shipping business, the city's role as a major ship-to-rail center, and the indigenous Puyallup people's close relationship with local waterways. Extensive exhibits cover boat-making, vintage scuba and diving gear, and fin and humpback whales. Photos and relics round out the displays, children's activities are offered regularly, and Tacoma Night Market takes place here once a month.

Frijole Ranch History Museum

Fodor's Choice

With its grassy, tree-shaded grounds, you could almost imagine this handsome and peaceful little 1876 ranch house somewhere other than the harsh Chihuahuan Desert. Inside what's believed to be the region's oldest intact structure, displays and photographs depict ranch life and early park history. Easy, family-friendly hiking trails lead to wildlife oases at Manzanita Spring and Smith Spring. The museum is staffed by volunteers, so hours are sporadic—check with the visitor center if you wish to go inside. Still, it's interesting just to explore the ranch grounds and outbuildings, orchard, and still-functioning irrigation system.

Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center

Fodor's Choice

The museum and visitor center is the place to start your exploration of the events and impact of the Battle of Gettysburg. A dozen galleries display a compelling mix of the museum's more than 40,000 artifacts, such as scores of weapons, uniforms, and a wooden desk believed to have been used by General Robert E. Lee. Interactive video and audio displays further illuminate the events, the centerpiece being the 377-foot-long "Battle of Gettysburg" cyclorama, a painting in-the-round depicting Pickett's Charge. Made in 1884, the painting is the largest in North America and one of the last cycloramas in existence, now completely restored. Stand in the center with the lights down while stirring narration and special effects immerse you in the story. It's paired with a documentary film, A New Birth of Freedom, in a 45-minute experience. In the main entry hall the National Park Service has an information desk offering help with everything from battlefield walking tours to free ranger-conducted programs. Private, licensed guides may also be hired at the center. There is a restaurant and a bookstore on-site.

Grand Encampment Museum

Fodor's Choice

The modern interpretive center at the Grand Encampment Museum holds exhibits on the history of the Grand Encampment copper district and logging and mining. A pioneer town of original buildings includes the Lake Creek stage station, the Big Creek tie-hack cabin, the Peryam homestead, the Slash Ridge fire tower, a blacksmith shop, a transportation barn, and a two-story outhouse. Among the other relics are three towers from a 16-mile-long aerial tramway built in 1903 to transport copper ore from mines in the Sierra Madres. You can take guided tours, and there's also a research area. A living-history day, with music, costumes, and events, takes place the third weekend in July.

807 Barnett Ave., Encampment, WY, 82325, USA
307-327–5308
Sight Details
Donations accepted
Closed Mon. Memorial Day--Labor Day. Closed Fri.--Sun. Memorial Day–early Oct. (but call ahead to verify open hrs in winter)

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High Desert Museum

Fodor's Choice

The West is actually quite wild, and this combo museum-zoo proves it. Kids will love the up-close-and-personal encounters with Gila monsters, snakes, porcupines, birds of prey, and otters. Characters in costume take part in the summertime Living History series, where you can chat with stagecoach drivers, boomtown widows, pioneers, homesteaders, and sawmill operators. Peruse the 110,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor exhibits, such as Spirit of the West and a historic family ranch, to experience how the past can truly come alive.

History Jackson Hole

Fodor's Choice

Formerly the Jackson Hole Historical Society & Museum, this new 13,200-square-foot museum opened in 2024. It features three stories' worth of exhibits in the main building and two historic cabins located out back. Learn about homesteaders, dude ranches, and hunters, as well as Jackson's all-female town government of yore—a woman sheriff of that era claimed to have killed three men before hanging up her spurs. Native American, ranching, and cowboy artifacts are on display. Every summer the society sponsors lectures and historic downtown walking tours (for a fee). Even if you don't have time to visit the museum, it's worth popping into the small gift shop.

History of Diving Museum

Fodor's Choice

This museum plunges into the history of man's thirst for undersea exploration. Amid its 13 galleries of interactive and other interesting displays are a submarine and helmet re-created from the film 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Vintage U.S. Navy equipment, diving helmets from around the world, and early scuba gear explore 4,000 years of diving history. Nifty scavenger hunt printouts make this fun for little ones. 

HistoryMiami Museum

Fodor's Choice

Discover a treasure trove of colorful stories about the region's history. Exhibits celebrate the city's multicultural heritage, including an old Miami streetcar and unique items chronicling the migration of Cubans to Miami. Truth be told, the museum is not wildly popular with tourists; however, the museum's tours certainly are. You can take a wide range of walking, boat, coach, bike, gallery, and eco-history tours with varying prices, including culture walks through Little Haiti, informative and exciting Little Havana Arts and Culture Walks, and an evening of storytelling during the Moon Over Miami tour led by HistoryMiami historian Dr. Paul George, where you'll float through Downtown on the Miami River, learning all about Miami's early history circa the Tequesta tribe's days.

Independence Heritage Museum

Fodor's Choice

This museum does a striking job at telling the story of Independence and its surrounding regions through the eyes of various communities that have contributed to its history, not just white settlers. You can see a recreation of an old general store stocked with vintage packaging, a lifelike blacksmithing display, and even a doctor's office where old-timey medicines and medical books are displayed. Kids love the skeleton of “Betsy the Cow,” used in local classrooms to teach anatomy since her bones were first discovered by a group of schoolchildren in the 1960s.

International African American Museum

Fodor's Choice

In a corridor that tells the gruesome history of American slavery at this strikingly beautiful yet stark new museum, an embroidered sack tells a bitter history. In 1921, Ruth Middleton sewed her grandmother's story into the canvas, recounting how she was sold to another family at age nine, with only the sack containing a tattered dress, a few pecans, and a braid of her mother's hair to take with her. It's easy to see why the museum includes private reflecting rooms with tissues on hand. The IAAM relates a factual, vivid account of the Middle Passage from Africa to Charleston, where 40% of enslaved Africans entered America. But while acknowledging the gruesome past and societal disadvantages African Americans still face, the majority of the museum celebrates their achievements, from politics to music to visual art, including a flexible gallery space. Permanent exhibits include a reconstructed Gullah-Geechee prayer house, an authentic bateau used for fishing and shrimping in the Lowcountry, and an elaborate Mardi Gras Indian costume from New Orleans. Underneath the new waterfront museum is the city's newest and most evocative public space, including a path through a garden of sweetgrass and the Tide Tribute, a sculptural diagram of the floor of a slave ship that fills and empties with the shifting tide in Charleston Harbor.

14 Wharfside St., Charleston, SC, 29401, USA
843-872--5352
Sight Details
$20
Closed Mon.
Advanced purchase, timed-entry tickets required

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The International Civil Rights Center and Museum

Downtown Fodor's Choice

With an unflinching eye, this museum documents the beauty and horror of America's civil rights movement of the 1960s. The star attraction is the actual Woolworth's lunch counter where countless African Americans staged sit-ins to protest segregation for more than six months in 1960. A guided tour shows viewers how this act of defiance spread to more than 50 cities throughout the South and helped finally bring segregation to an end. Other exhibits uncover the brutality of America's racism throughout the South.

Many of the museum's graphic images of historical violence may be too intense for young eyes.

Jackie Robinson Museum

SoHo Fodor's Choice

The life and legacy of Jackie Robinson, the trailblazing Black baseball player who broke the color barrier when he signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, is the focus of this $42 million interactive museum on the western edge of SoHo. Besides memorabilia—Robinson’s Dodgers uniform, rookie contract, and Rookie of the Year award are among hundreds of archival major-league artifacts on display—Robinson’s Civil Rights legacy is given equal due. The intense racial discrimination the Hall of Famer endured both on and off the field is powerfully narrated through photos and videos, including one clip that vividly recounts the segregation he and his wife, Rachel, experienced en route to Florida spring training as the South was under Jim Crow laws.

Jane Addams Hull-House Museum

University Village Fodor's Choice

Hull House was the birthplace of social work. Social welfare pioneers and peace advocates Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr started the American settlement house movement in this redbrick Victorian in 1889. They wrought near-miracles in the surrounding community, which was then a slum for new immigrants. Pictures and letters add context to the two museum buildings, which re-create the homey setting the residents experienced. The museum, located on the UIC campus, also hosts a range of events typically geared toward progressive social movements.

Japanese American Museum of Oregon

Fodor's Choice

A few blocks from the related historical plaza in Waterfront Park, this excellent museum opened in an attractive new space in 2021 and pays homage to the dynamic Nikkei (Japanese emigrant) community that has thrived in Portland for generations. It presents engaging rotating exhibits that use art, photography, personal histories, and artifacts to touch on all aspects of the Japanese American experience in Portland and the Northwest, including the dark period during World War II of forced relocation to concentration camps situated throughout the U.S. West.

411 N.W. Flanders St., OR, 97209, USA
503-224–1458
Sight Details
$8
Closed Mon. (and some weekdays in winter)

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John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum

South Boston Fodor's Choice

Sitting at the edge of Dorchester Bay, this stark, white building (a modernist monument designed by I. M. Pei) pays homage to the life and presidency of John F. Kennedy, as well as to members of his family, including his wife, Jacqueline, and brother Robert. The library-museum is both a center for serious scholarship and a focus for Boston's nostalgia for her native son. 

The library is the official repository of JFK's presidential papers and displays re-creations of his desk in the Oval Office and of the television studio in which he debated Richard Nixon in the 1960 election. Permanent exhibits focus on his life before politics, the 1960 presidential election, the Peace Corps, and the U.S. space program. There's also a permanent display on the late Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. The facility also includes a store and a small café.

John Wesley Powell River History Museum

Fodor's Choice

Learn what it was like to travel down the Green and Colorado Rivers in the 1800s in wooden boats. A series of displays tracks the Powell Party's arduous, dangerous 1869 journey, and visitors can watch the award-winning film Journey Into the Unknown for a cinematic taste of the white-water adventure. The center also houses the River Runner's Hall of Fame, a tribute to those who have followed in Powell's wake. River-theme art occupies a gallery, and there's a dinosaur exhibit on the lower level.

Kauai Museum

Fodor's Choice

Maintaining a stately presence on Rice Street, the historical museum building is easy to find and features a permanent display, "The Story of Kauai," that provides a competent overview of the Garden Island and Niihau. Local artists are represented in changing exhibits in the second-floor Mezzanine Gallery. Weekly cultural classes on hula, lei making, and other topics are offered. The gift shop alone is worth a visit, with a fine collection of authentic Niihau shell lei, hand-turned wooden bowls, reference books, and other quality arts, crafts, and gifts—many of them locally made.

La Rochelle Mansion and Museum

Fodor's Choice

Stepping into the large foyer of this 1903 brick chateau, your view flows through glass doors on the opposite side, then across the piazza and flat lawn to a serene coastal expanse. A business partner of J.P. Morgan, George Bowdoin, and his wife, Julia, built this 13,000-square-foot, 41-room mansion near downtown Bar Harbor as their seasonal residence. Unlike many local summer “cottages” of the nation’s elite, it was spared by the Great Fire of 1947. In 2020, La Rochelle became Bar Harbor Historical Society's museum and the town’s only Gilded Age mansion open to the public. While the Bowdoins’ story weaves through displays, each room has themed exhibits on local history: in the reception room, baskets the Wabanaki made to sell to tourists and displays about local work and industry that shaped the town; the dining room, grand hotels of yesteryear; the master bedroom, old maps (one shows where the fire raged); and so on. Under the elegant wishbone staircase, a “flower room” with a curved wall spotlights the famous landscape artist who created the long-gone sunken garden. In the servants' quarters on the third floor, their story is shared—don’t miss the hallway call box. In the garage, accessible from outside and open when the museum is, free exhibits spotlight today's working waterfrontFrom dawn to dusk year-round, the public can enjoy the grounds at no charge. The museum has a gift shop.

127 West St., Bar Harbor, ME, 04609, USA
207-288–0000
Sight Details
$18, guided tours $23 (10 am Wed. and Fri. only)
Closed late Oct.–late May and Sun. late May–late Oct.

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Lanai Culture & Heritage Center

Fodor's Choice

At this small and carefully arranged museum, displays of plantation-era clothing and tools, ranch memorabilia, old maps, precious feather lei, poi pounders, photographs, family portraits, and other artifacts and memorabilia give you insight on the history of the island and its people. Postcards, maps, books, and pamphlets are for sale. The friendly staff can provide information on and directions to the island's historical sites, making this the best place to start your explorations. The Heritage Center's Lanai Guide app is a trove of information—both practical and historical—on the island's sites.

LBJ Presidential Library

University of Texas Area Fodor's Choice

The artifacts on display inside this stunning travertine building provide sharp insight into the 36th president's mind and motivations, and though his foibles are downplayed, a clear sense of the Texas native—earthy, conniving, sensitive, and wry—emerges. Pick up any of the clunky rotary-phone receivers throughout the museum to hear real recordings of conversations Johnson had with famous politicians and figureheads during his time in office. The 30-plus hours of tape include ruminations on Vietnam and civil rights, plus strategic arguments about vote wrangling (LBJ's specialty). There are rotating temporary exhibits on the ground floor and free on-site visitor parking in lot 38.  Be sure to check out the second floor, where a life-sized audio-animatronic figure of LBJ spins humorous anecdotes; it's a hoot.

Loomis Museum

Fodor's Choice

In this handsome building constructed of volcanic rock in 1927, you can view artifacts from the park's 1914 and 1915 eruptions, including dramatic original photographs taken by Benjamin Loomis, who was instrumental in the park's establishment. The museum also has a bookstore, exhibits about the area's Native American heritage, and a helpful staff who can recommend hikes and points of interest on this side of the park.

Lyman Museum and Mission House

Fodor's Choice

Built in 1839 by missionary couple Sarah and David Lyman from New England, the beautifully restored Lyman Mission House is the Island's oldest wood-frame building. On display are household utensils, artifacts, tools, and furniture used by the family, giving visitors a peek into the day-to-day lives of Hawaii's first missionaries. The Lymans hosted such literary dignitaries as Isabella Bird and Mark Twain here. The home is on the State and National Registers of Historic Places, and docent-guided tours are offered. An adjacent museum has wonderful exhibits on volcanoes, island formation, island habitats and wildlife, marine shells, and minerals and gemstones; it also showcases Native Hawaiian culture and the culture of immigrant ethnic groups. On permanent exhibit is a full-size replica of a traditional 1930s Korean home. The gift shop sells superb Hawaiian-made items.

Maine Maritime Museum

Fodor's Choice

No trip to Bath is complete without visiting the cluster of preserved 19th- and early 20th-century buildings that were once part of the historic Percy & Small Shipyard. Plan to spend at least half a day exploring them and the adjacent modern museum. Indeed, there's so much to see that admission tickets are good for two days.

During hour-long shipyard tours, you'll learn how massive wooden ships were built, and you might see shipwrights and blacksmiths at work. One of the vintage buildings houses a fascinating, 6,000-square-foot lobstering exhibit. In the main building ship models, paintings, photographs, and artifacts showcase maritime history. The grounds also contain a gift shop and bookstore; a seasonal café; and a huge, modern sculpture representing the 450-foot-long, six-masted schooner Wyoming, built right here and one of the longest wooden vessels ever launched. 

From late May through late October, daily nature and lighthouse cruises, ranging from 30 minutes to three hours, are offered aboard the motor vessel Merrymeeting, which travels along the scenic Kennebec River. The museum also has guided tours of Bath Iron Works (June–mid-October).

The Mob Museum

Downtown Fodor's Choice

It's fitting that the $42-million Mob Museum (a.k.a., the National Museum of Organized Crime & Law Enforcement) sits in the circa-1933 former federal courthouse and U.S. Post Office Downtown where the Kefauver Committee held one of its historic hearings on organized crime in 1950. Today the museum pays homage to Las Vegas's criminal underbelly, explaining to visitors (sometimes with way too much exhibit text) how the Mafia worked, who was involved, how the law brought down local mobsters, and what happened to gangsters once they were caught and incarcerated. Museum highlights include bricks from the wall of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre in 1929 and a mock-up of the electric chair that killed a number of mobsters (as well as spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg). In 2018 the museum converted its basement into The Underground, which comprises a working distillery and an open-to-the-public "speakeasy" that has become a separate draw for locals in its own right.

Monterey State Historic Park

Fodor's Choice

You can glimpse Monterey's early history in several well-preserved adobe buildings in Custom House Plaza and the downtown area. Although most are only open via guided tours (check ahead for details), some also have beautiful gardens to explore. Set in what was once a hotel and saloon, the Pacific House Museum now houses a visitor center and exhibits of gold-rush relics; photographs of old Monterey; and Native American baskets, pottery, and other artifacts. The adjacent Custom House, built by the Mexican government in 1827 and now California's oldest standing public building, was the first stop for sea traders whose goods were subject to duties. (In 1846 Commodore John Sloat raised the American flag over this adobe structure and claimed California for the United States.)

Exhibits at Casa Soberanes (1842), once a customs-house guard's residence, survey Monterey life from Mexican rule to the present. A veranda encircles the second floor of Larkin House (1835), whose namesake, an early California statesman, brought many of the antique furnishings inside from New Hampshire. Stevenson House was named in honor of author Robert Louis Stevenson, who boarded here briefly in a tiny upstairs room that's now furnished with items from his family's estate. Other rooms include a gallery of memorabilia and a children's nursery with Victorian toys.

If the buildings are closed, you can access a cell-phone tour 24/7 (831/998–9458) or download an app.

Moosehead Cultural Heritage Center

Fodor's Choice

At East Cove in downtown Greenville, the 1904 "Community House," as this former church is known, is one of two Moosehead Historical Society museum locales. Some displays on local history and culture are in the auditorium, with original wood trim, wainscoting, and floor and stained glass atop the arched windows. The Native American exhibit showcases artifacts and items dating from 9,000 BC and shares the stories of residents such as Henry Perley (1885–1972), a guide and author who gained fame as a performer in Wild West shows and movies. Another exhibit reveals the impact of aviation—from early bush pilots to Greenville's annual International Seaplane Fly-In the weekend after Labor Day—in this remote region. Many visitors come for the display on the Air Force B-52 plane crash that killed seven of nine crew members in 1963. You can get information about the short hike to the debris-littered crash site, now a memorial, north of town. Outside the museum, sculptures honor Henry David Thoreau and his Penobscot guides, Chief Joseph Attean and Joseph Polis, who departed with him from Greenville for Maine's wilds. There are also changing exhibits.

6 Lakeview St., Greenville, ME, 04441, USA
207-695–2909-Moosehead Historical Society office
Sight Details
By donation
Closed mid-Sept.–mid-June. Closed Sat.–Tues. mid-June–mid-Sept.

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