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    Mullan Museum

    4.5 (2 reviews)

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    2 years ago

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    Wallace District Mining Museum

    Wallace District Mining Museum

    (7 reviews)

    So much history in a small town means there are museums to talk about it, and the mining museum…read moredoes a good job of that. I love that many of these museums are free (with a donation suggested). When you walk in, you'll see some small souvenirs that you can buy. If you continue straight, there is the exhibit where you can enter and walk around. The cool thing is that it is dark until you walk near it and then it lights up the next portion of the exhibit. As you go through the museum you learn about the process of mining and the history. You'll learn about the safety of it, drilling and equipment, and even explosives. You'll also learn about the different types of rocks, the development of mining equipment and technology to help increase productivity, the union formation and legal battles. There's really a lot to read and learn and you can spend anywhere from 30-60 minutes here.

    I thought that this was a well done museum that far exceeded my expectations for a small town…read moremuseum. The staff was very friendly and answered our questions. They even told a fun story to the kids who were with us. There are lots of artifacts from the local area and some nicely set up displays that help portray what mining was and is like in the area. Be careful when it comes to the days that they are open. We drove to Wallace specifically to visit the mining museum and arrived to find it closed even though their website stated "open all year" and "open 7 days a week". We returned a few days later and were able to visit, but I would recommend making a phone call to confirm that they will be open when you intend to visit.

    Idaho's Mammoth Cave - Beautiful peacocks during mating season. Beautiful experience.

    Idaho's Mammoth Cave

    (5 reviews)

    This place is BIZARRE! The explorer in me loved it for it's cooky-ness and the historian in me was…read moreappalled at the conditions. So just keep in mind that you are in for an adventure and everything should be viewed skeptically and with a healthy dose of rural Idaho grace. We came for the cave, and walked away shocked by the museum. Idaho's Mammoth Cave is located near Shoshone ID. You'll take H-75 and see two options to the left to get to the caves. The first left is a smaller, bumpier road, so I suggest waiting for the second turn. You'll pull into what looks like a bunch of dumpy outbuildings and a giant round hut. Turns out...it is a bunch of dumpy outbuildings and a giant round hut. There are tons of falling down structures and old farm equipment, dotted by giant rock heads and strutting peacocks. This place also stylizes itself as a bird sanctuary, but we only saw peacocks. A lot of peacocks. You'll go into the giant hut, which is the entrance to the cave and to the "museum". We were greeted by a kind young man who gave us his canned introduction of the place, handed us a lantern and pointed us to the cave. Unfortunately this place is not ADA compliant. The path down to the cave is a dirt path, pretty steeply sloped. The entrance to the cave has steps and the cave itself has very uneven walking paths and is rather narrow at a few points. You will immediately feel a temperature drop. The cave trail is only about 1/4 of a mile, but you lose the outside light quickly. Definitely keep your lantern on and don't turn it off on your unsuspecting partner who will shriek, hit you, and then wrestle the lantern away. :) The cave is cool, with some homespun signs with some (questionable) information. After exploring the cave, you'll return to the surface along the same path. Then you can explore the "museum". I put this in quotes, because it's more a freaky curated collection of things. There are three concentric circles that you will navigate to see SO. MANY. THINGS. Many of them fake, some of them probably pilfered, and all of them so dusty. You will see a lot of taxidermy. No doubt those things are legit. I have serious doubts about the dinosaur bones and ancient artifacts. There is no attempt to protect any of the artifacts and my historian's heart was screaming at the lack of order, proper dating and classification, and controlled containment. Regardless of the legitimate status of this place, it is a true Idaho experience. Owned by a private family, out in the middle of the high desert, with zero attempt to pander to the masses. This place screams Idaho and is absolutely worth a visit.

    A one time experience. Cave is interesting, different animals, a museum with lots of artifacts and…read morestuffed animals. A couple hours at the most for 15$ per person.

    Mullan Museum - museums - Updated May 2026

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