Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Quilcene Historical Museum

    5.0 (2 reviews)

    Quilcene Historical Museum Photos

    Quilcene Historical Museum - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington
    Quilcene Historical Museum - Homestead. - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington
    Quilcene Historical Museum - Store front - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington
    Quilcene Historical Museum - Logging paraphenillia - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington
    Quilcene Historical Museum - Actual Spanking Machine. - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington
    Quilcene Historical Museum - Folks in Quilcene are still not huge fans of the Spotted Owl. - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington
    Quilcene Historical Museum - Logging paraphenillia - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington

    See all

    Quilcene Historical Museum - Crab display - Museums Near Me - Quilcene, Washington

    You might also consider

    Recommended Reviews - Quilcene Historical Museum

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    3 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    13 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Verify this business for free

    People searched for Museums 100 times last month within 15 miles of this business.

    Verify this business

    Port Gamble Museum

    Port Gamble Museum

    4.4(12 reviews)
    13.7 mi

    This is a great place to visit. Lots of really neat displays with a gift shop downstairs.read more

    This is a cool little museum in a cool little town. It's a little on the smaller side, but it's got…read moresome cool history about the original founders. Upon walking to the entrance, you're greeted by a large anchor, a big motor and an amazing view of the water. A perfect place to snap some photos or just sit and take in the scenery. Entrance is pretty cheap: $4 for adults and $3 for children, seniors and students. Not too bad for a short educational experience, but be warned: It's cash only! Inside you'll see original pieces of the town and duplicated setups of the area's most popular spots like the hotel, ships, bedrooms, and more. They have signs at each spot for you to read and understand what you're looking at. I'd recommend checking it out if you've walked around the rest of Port Gamble. It just gives you a little bit more insight and sort of pieces everything together for you. The lady at the counter was great about providing some additional information if you needed any elaborations and even told us that they do paranormal tours during Halloween. More of a reason to come back, even though she hasn't experienced any hauntings herself. After the tour, they have a gift shop upstairs as well as a cafe. Just gives you another opportunity to fuel up and take in some of the sights. We came during a rainy day and the views were still great. When the sun is shining, I'm sure they are even better! Parking is a cinch. Plenty of free parking all over the area.

    Photos
    Port Gamble Museum
    Port Gamble Museum
    Port Gamble Museum

    See all

    SJIMA San Juan Islands Museum Of Art - Black eyed squid.

    SJIMA San Juan Islands Museum Of Art

    4.0(8 reviews)
    49.1 mi
    $

    I'm a part-time San Juan Islander and a regular visitor to SJIMA. Over the years, I have been…read moreincredibly impressed by the professional presentation of art at SJIMA. I go to a lot of museum exhibitions. I found SJIMA to present an exhibition that is better than any museum in Washington; better than SAM, better than Bainbridge, etc. I'm not sure what has changed; maybe staff is getting complacent, but the last two exhibitions have been incredibly disappointing. The current exhibition of Andy Eccleshall is flat, does not flow and the lighting is terrible. It really is a disservice to Eccleshall as his work is fantastic. The work in the glass room in front looks like a college student's exhibition. The volume of work in the small room is overwhelming and average at best. Again, something must have changed because the last two exhibitions are not up to what my expectations are for SJIMA. I will probably check out the next one but if it is at the level of the last two, I won't be wasting my time or money again.

    NOT the San Juan Islands Sculpture Park. Due to some of the pictures and reviews, I thought the…read moresculpture garden was here. It is not. The San Juan Islands Sculpture Park is on the other side of the island at 9083 Roche Harbor Road San Juan Island, WA 98250. This museum was great, but not the one we were looking for.

    Photos
    SJIMA San Juan Islands Museum Of Art - Meet Eba: The Whale-poop-sniffing Dog

    Meet Eba: The Whale-poop-sniffing Dog

    SJIMA San Juan Islands Museum Of Art - Tom Small's "Jazz Tower"

    Tom Small's "Jazz Tower"

    SJIMA San Juan Islands Museum Of Art - By island sculptor Tom Small

    See all

    By island sculptor Tom Small

    Museum of Pop Culture - Close-up of Roots and Branches sculpture at the Museum of Pop Culture

    Museum of Pop Culture

    4.0(2k reviews)
    28.4 miLower Queen Anne

    Museum of Pop Culture took me a decade to finally go. Waited too long…read more Back when Frank Gehry was still around, I lived next to Linda's Tavern, the last place Kurt Cobain was seen. Wild to be here now and the Cobain exhibit is gone after all these years, and so has Frank (RIP); architectural genius. The building still hits. The architecture alone is worth it. Sci-fi, horror, and fantasy exhibits carry the experience. At this point, I'd come back for the rotating shows, Rebels & Icons on the 15th, and the upstairs Lounge Bar. Low key hidden, solid pop art food/drinks, complimentary chips with their own seasoning, and great service. The museum should separate this bar on Yelp, I want to review this separately.(hint) That combo makes the membership make sense.

    This is a great place for pop culture enthusiasts, guitar lovers and people who love to play with…read moremusic instruments and song composing. Because this place has a wonderful collection of legendary guitars and guitarists. One the second floor there a huge sound lab with booths of different instruments and individual rooms to do sound engineering. The game room section had several stations to try out different home made games. Other than these major features, there are few more artifacts from music, sports and movie world are scattered around the place. In the lower floor, there's a nice cafe. There's also a makeshift gift shop with limited pop culture products. We came to the museum around noon. Our tickets were part of CityPass. We spend about half an hour here. Overall it was an underwhelming experience for me.

    Photos
    Museum of Pop Culture - "I'll be back!"

    "I'll be back!"

    Museum of Pop Culture - Gaming area

    Gaming area

    Museum of Pop Culture - Pixel sculpture at Indie Game Revolution video game exhibition at the Museum of Pop Culture

    See all

    Pixel sculpture at Indie Game Revolution video game exhibition at the Museum of Pop Culture

    Port Townsend Aero Museum

    Port Townsend Aero Museum

    5.0(3 reviews)
    16.1 mi

    The path not taken…read more.. Once upon a time, long before I had a driver's license, a pilot in Fairbanks, Alaska offered to help me get my pilot's license. What to say? Sighhhhhhh...the summer was short, my family was heading home, and it never happened. But.... Had I lived in Port Townsend, WA as a child, it could have. Indeed, it would have. I'd be flying the friendly skies of PT now, even as we speak. But, of course, I might not have time to do this review... www.ptaeromuseum.com I visited the Port Townsend Aero Museum three days days ago. T'was a bright spring day and I was loathe to go inside knowing that the three day forecast was for snow, snow, snow. Chipper Yelper that I am, I went inside the museum anyhoo, leaving the balmy outdoor weather to a small (teenaged) work crew landscaping the front of the building. If the kids were hard at work making the place beautiful for visitors, who was I not to reward their efforts? A small admission fee got me inside the new building. Airplane models hung from the rafters, beautifully restored planes had "landed" strategically about the floors. Placards described each plane and its role in history. Several planes (as noted on the placards) were currently in use as training craft for the young pilots who learn to fly at the museum. My entrance fee (donations from other visitors) is what keeps the fly lessons and the museum going. So I lingered for an hour or so, looking at airplane models, antique cars and some wonderful old flight helmets and gauges. I walked the catwalk around the inside of the tall building, looked at aviation paintings, watched other visitors as they entered the spacious hangar. DIdn't even notice that I was inside on a balmy day. I do have a suggestion or two for future museum exhibits: I'd have liked to have seen a motor, perhaps with its schematic nearby. I would have enjoyed brief "instructions" on the aerodyamics of flight. A checklist of preparations for lift-off and landing would have been fun to look at. (I am told that these are readily available through airplane manufacturers...so a generic list shouldn't be hard for the museum to find. ) There once was a wonderful old hand-lettered sign visible as you exited Jefferson International Airport, which is where the museum is located. It said "Don't forget to close your flight book." Perhaps an actual flight book would make interesting reading. Certainly the visitors' comment book does reflect the numbers of geographically distant folks who tour the museum but no space is included in it for visitors comments. This would be nice. But heck. Who am I to tinker with the success of this endeavor? This is a cool museum. Kids involved in its programs really *do* get the flight bug and occasionally do solo before they get their Washington State driver's license. And as for me? Well, I had a good time. Hopped into my ancient Saturn which was parked in the parking lot. Waved at the kids working on the landscaping. Scanned my gas gauge, speedometer and clock...and said to myself as I exited into the sunny Port Townsend afternoon... What if?? The road not taken. Or rather the runway not taken. Yet.

    My husband and I made this one of our musts during our trip to Port Townsend, and it didn't…read moredisappoint! I know nothing about planes, but I still really enjoyed the museum, which has a whole bunch of beautiful planes, gliders, engines, and artifacts on display. Staff was friendly and fun to chat with. I learned a lot and the husband had a lot of fun here.

    Photos
    Port Townsend Aero Museum
    Port Townsend Aero Museum
    Port Townsend Aero Museum

    See all

    Quilcene Historical Museum - museums - Updated June 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...