This museum is a must. It is a great look at migration into South Australia, and Australia as a whole, and it is very educational. There are three areas in this museum, well four if you include settlement square.
When you come into the grounds of this museum, you are greeted by Settlement Square, this square is full of bricks with peoples names on them and where they emigrated from. They have been put their either by families who emigrated, or want a way to remember their families who emigrated. A few years ago, my Dad arranged to have a brick put into Settlement Square for his parents, and the family who emigrated from Sheffield.
The interior of the museum is split into three areas, one of which pretty much stays the same all the time, it talks about Australia's migration history, from the first fleet through to our current (in my opinion, APPALLING) treatment of refugees. The other two areas of the museum are an ever changing array of exhibitions. This means that I quite often have a reason to visit the museum.
On the weekend I went there with my Dad :) to visit the brick for his parents, but while we were there we had a look through the museum. The current exhibition in the front room was about the explorers, and therefore not really to my interest, so we decided to take a walk through the rest of the museum, which has not really changed that much. My Dad was on his mobility scooter, and at the end of the main exhibition there is a large step down into the courtyard, so we had to go back through the exhibition in order to get out. On the way back, we ran into a woman and her daughter who were in the area that talks about the White Australia Policy. This sparked up a conversation :) We got talking about all sorts of things. This is one of the reasons I love this museum, it is thought and conversation provoking.
This museum is only the cost of a gold coin, and for that it is well worth the visit!
If you are looking for something to do for an afternoon - I would suggest the Migration Museum :) read more