There are 15 Local history museums in Hunter Valley
15 results
The Sunnyside Historic House and South Sea Island Museum is located in Lake Macquarie Town Hall, New South Wales.
A former courthouse building (1869) is the site of a local history museum which focuses on Clarence Town as a terminal of navigation and river port.
Dungog Museum is housed in the Grade II listed former School of the Arts building from 1898.
Gresford Local History Museum showcases the area's local history, extending back to the 1820s.
The Greta Historical Museum is a Local History museum located in Grenfell, NSW.
The Lake Macquarie and District Museum is a Local History museum located in Lake Goldsmith, NSW.
The museum is housed in an old 4-room stone house, one of the oldest buildings in the city, built between 1847 and 1856 as a private home.
The museum has a section for historical comics, postage stamps, hundreds of cameras, rare musical instruments and other items of general and Australian historical interest.
Morpeth Museum’s mission is ‘To collect, preserve and interpret'.
The exhibits of the museum relate to the city of Murrurundi and the surrounding district.
The Museum tells stories of Newcastle and the Hunter, and through its collection presents a narrative of how people of this area lived once and how they live today.
The policy of the museum is to collect items relating to Paterson and the district - The collection is housed in the former Paterson Court House (1858-63).
Rathmines Heritage Center is Lake Mac's newest exhibition venue!
Preserving Upper Hunter History.
The Singleton Historical Society was founded.