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    Recommended Reviews - Gaineswood

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    National Voting Rights Museum

    National Voting Rights Museum

    4.5(11 reviews)
    48.2 mi

    We we touring Selma on a Saturday morning and after walking the Pettus Bridge, we looked over at…read morethe museum and saw that they were open. It is located at the bottom of the bridge. Normally, it is only opened by reservation. Luckily for us, some group had it reserved for that morning and the museum historian, Sam Walker, graciously let us piggy back on the group. Mr. Walker was amazing and showed a lot pride in the museum. He was very friendly and helpful and pointed out a few key highlights of the museum to us before we really got into it. The museum has a decent sized parking lot and a small gift shop that was not open while I was there. The museum is a lot larger than it looks. It just kept going and going. It provides not only a background on voting rights history, it has a display of photos from Bloody Sunday, a President Obama Gallery, a jail cell exhibit, a church exhibit, a lot of information about the Foot Soldiers, a Ku Klux Klan display, White only and Black drinking fountains, early Black elected officials, MLK and Ghandi comparison, and bogus voting test. Mr Walker came out from the front desk and told us the story of the Bloody Sunday pictures on the wall. They were never seen before then and were donated by a police photographer after he heard of the opening of the museum. The photographer was living in Montgomery at the time and hooked them up with who to request the pictures from. He then showed us a photo and pointed out the window and told us that certain picture occurred outside of the window "right there". That is when it dawned on me that the horrible events of that fateful day occurred right out front of the museum. Outside you will find a bus, which I think they use to help people register and vote. There are also some nice murals on garage doors out there that I really liked and tie into the city, and voting rights. This museum does not have the huge funding that others get. They still do a wonderful job presenting the information. The museum is well organized and has lots of displays and artifacts. It took me about 45 minutes to go through the museum. I know it is difficult to get into the museum. I have been to Selma a few times and was unable to make it happen prior to this trip. And I just lucked out on this go around. It is however, worth the effort and I highly recommend checking this museum out.

    Very disappointed with attempt to visit museum on a Thursday. Website clearly states that the…read moremuseum should've been open from 10-4, but we arrived to find a sign taped to the door saying "Sorry the Museum will open by appointments only until further notice." Since we were only passing through Selma for the day, trying to make an appointment at THAT point was pointless; not sure why the info on the website wasn't updated so that we could've planned appropriately.

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    National Voting Rights Museum
    National Voting Rights Museum
    National Voting Rights Museum

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    Alabama Museum of Natural History - The Alabama Museum of Natural History is located in Smith Hall on the campus of The University of Alabama.

    Alabama Museum of Natural History

    5.0(1 review)
    51.5 mi

    Museum is small but so is the ticket price. Large skeleton was cool and the replicas of the field…read morecamp and dinosaurs skull was cool. Nice break from the road for an hour.

    From the owner: Our organization includes the oldest museum in Alabama, a 185-acre park on the former site of the…read morepolitical and ceremonial center of a vast Native American chiefdom, an Emmy Award-winning public television series, the oldest structure on the University of Alabama campus, one of only a handful of UA buildings that survived the Civil War, and the only museum tracing Tuscaloosa's history through the development of its transportation systems. Through our two "behind the scenes" divisions, we also develop interdisciplinary research programs focusing on museum-based research and provide archaeological and historic research and cultural resources management services to federal, Native American tribal, state, and local governmental agencies. For general information about our museums, departments, and programs, visit our webpage. How We Came to Be UA Museums as we currently know it -- a collection of multiple museums under a single administrative umbrella -- stems from a reorganization in 1990. Prior to that all the museums were under the Alabama Museum of Natural History at UA. Until 1961 the museum(s) were part of the Geological Survey of Alabama, reflecting the museums' roots in the work of pioneering geologist E.A. Smith. In 2017 UA Museums joined the College of Arts and Sciences, The University of Alabama's largest division and the academic core of the University. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram!

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    Alabama Museum of Natural History - The Gorgas House Museum, a unit of The University of Alabama Museums, is also located on campus of The University of Alabama.

    The Gorgas House Museum, a unit of The University of Alabama Museums, is also located on campus of The University of Alabama.

    Alabama Museum of Natural History - Basilosaurus cetoides, a fossil whale from the Eocene Period, is the official state fossil of Alabama.

    Basilosaurus cetoides, a fossil whale from the Eocene Period, is the official state fossil of Alabama.

    Alabama Museum of Natural History

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    Monroe County Heritage Museum

    Monroe County Heritage Museum

    4.5(2 reviews)
    74.1 mi

    There's little we can add to Michelle D's review other than to agree heartily with it and strongly…read morerecommend seeing this museum and supporting its mission. We stopped here yesterday afternoon on our drive from Mobile to Athens and were delighted to visit Harper Lee and Truman Capote's home town. The exhibits at the museum are tastefully done, but the real show stopper is the recently renovated courtroom that the movie carefully replicated. We bought a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird from the gift store as a memento. We also stopped by Mel's Drive In, which is where Lee's home used to be and where there is a plaque by the old brick fence of Capote's demolished house. It was actually kind of a sad sight. Another point of interest is that you see a ton of cotton fields on your drive into town. They're strangely lovely to look at, but a poignant reminder of the racial history of the area which Lee captured so well in her magnum opus.

    My Aunt and I took a day trip to Monroeville to visit Nell Harper Lee and Truman Capote's childhood…read morehometown. We stopped for a visit to The Old Courthouse Museum. This building is well preserved and full of wonderful exhibits. Exhibits on Ms Lee and Mr Capote's lives in Monroeville, exhibits on how the town responded to it's taste of famous visitors before and after the film was made. The courthouse was the model for the Hollywood set during the Courthouse scene in To Kill a Mockingbird. The real court room is staged like the film and they have performances during the summer months in tribute. There is a wonderful gift shop that has put great thought into the gifts and products that they sell. This building is lovingly maintained and the folks running the museum take great pride in their space. My Aunt and I had gotten there towards the end of the day but we did not feel pressured to leave. In fact, we had a great conversation with a man who works there about Mr Capote. He turned out to be a relative of Mr Capote. There are other locations that are under the Monroe County Heritage Museum but the only other location we saw was the Capote Marker/Faulk Fence on South Alabama Avenue by Mel's Diner. Again, a space that is attended too with great care. As a literature nut, this was a great day trip from Pensacola. Worth every moment.

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    Monroe County Heritage Museum
    Monroe County Heritage Museum - Inside the courtroom as seen from the balcony

    Inside the courtroom as seen from the balcony

    Monroe County Heritage Museum - A piece of the tree where Boo Radley would leave gifts

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    A piece of the tree where Boo Radley would leave gifts

    Gaineswood - landmarks - Updated June 2026

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