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Tupelo Veterans Museum

4.0 (2 reviews)

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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)
100.2 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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Marshall County Historical Museum

Marshall County Historical Museum

5.0(1 review)
52.9 mi

I loveeee this museum. There's just sooo much history!!…read more Marshall County Historical Museum (Holly Springs, MS) I absolutely love Holly Springs and couldn't pick just one topic! So I decided to do a snip-it timeline of some of its history 1700s: This area was home to the Chickasaw Indians. During the early 1700s, white settlers moved to the Mississippi area in search of rich soil for farms and plantations. 1800-1860: William Randolph is credited with founding the town and Holly Springs was incorporated as a city in 1837. For a short time the name was changed to "Paris" but political pressure caused it to be renamed Holly Springs. By 1838, Holly Springs was flourishing with 14 law offices, 6 doctor's offices, 2 banks, 9 dry good stores, 5 grocery stores, 5 churches, 3 hotels and several private schools. Hillcrest Cemetery was built on land settler William S. Randolph gave the city in 1837. 1851-1860: Holly Springs was considered the un-official capital of north Mississippi. Cultured sons and daughters were sent here to be educated in one of the 6 schools located on College Avenue or at one of the military schools. On November 16, 1853, the Mississippi Railroad held its ground breaking ceremony and fair. Colonel H. W. Walter, who turned the first spade of dirt to start the railroad, drove in the last spike for the railroad in January 1860. 1861-1870: The Civil War began and the first volunteers from Holly Springs left town March 28, 1861, as the Jeff Davis Rifle and Home Guards. Ida B. Wells, a black newspaper editor and journalist was born on July 16, 1862. On November 13, 1862, the town suffered Union occupation. General Grant set up his headquarters at Airliewood and his wife at Walter Place. Confederate Major General Earl Van Dorn blew up/burned much of Grant's supplies and captured 1500 prisoners. The Union troops retaliated by burning much of the city. Holly Springs suffered 60 distinct raids during the war. Rust College was established in 1866 as a Freedmen's school. Mississippi returned to the Union February 23, 1867. In December 1869 the State's Reconstruction legislature passed a new constitution granting former slaves the right to vote. 1871-1880: Hiram Rhodes Revels became Mississippi's first black Senator (1870-71). James Hill, a former slave from Holly Springs, became Secretary of State for Mississippi in 1874. Yellow fever came to Holly Springs in 1878. Since there was no hospital in Holly Springs, citizens and churches took in the ill. Men thought to be immune were sent to knock on doors and, if there was no answer, they entered to remove the bodies. The deaths continued to mount until a mass grave was used (Hillcrest Cemetery). An early frost stopped the spread of the disease but the town's population had been decimated by over 2,000 souls.

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Marshall County Historical Museum
Marshall County Historical Museum
Marshall County Historical Museum

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Tupelo Veterans Museum - museums - Updated May 2026

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