Thanksgiving Schedule: The Greeley History Museum will be

CLOSED on Thursday, 11/28 and Friday, 11/29

OPEN on Saturday, 11/30

 

Greeley History Museum

The Greeley History Museum showcases and preserves Greeley and Weld County’s history through permanent and temporary exhibitions, educational programs, research and collections. Check out the museum’s main exhibit, “Utopia: Adaptation on the Plains,” and then head over to one of the museum’s other galleries, which include updated themes throughout each year.  At the Greeley History Museum, artifacts, photographs and hands-on opportunities create a meaningful visitor experience.

In addition to exhibits, the lower level of the museum contains the Hazel E. Johnson Research Center, which has an impressive collection of documentary and photographic resources available for researchers, students and genealogists.

The building, originally built in 1929 for the Greeley Tribune, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and became home to the Greeley History Museum in 2005.

Greeley History Museum

714 8th Street, Greeley CO 80631

Hours:

Wednesday,  Group Visits by Appointment
Thursday-Saturday,  10am–4pm
Sunday-Tuesday,  Closed
Closed on major holidays

Admission:

$8  Adult
$6  Seniors (60+)
$5  Youth (3-17)
$25  Family Rate (max. 2 adults and 4 youth)
$3  SNAP & EBT Card Holders
Members receive free admission. Join today!

Group Visits and
Facility Rentals

Request Information

Entrance and Parking

The museum has two entrances on the north side of the building and an accessible entrance on the south side. Free 2-hour parking with the option to pay to stay is located north and south of the museum. Greeley is bicycle-friendly and there are 2 bicycle racks outside on the north side of the museum.

Exhibitions

 

Utopia: Adaptation on the Plains

Visitors can explore the history of Greeley, including the formation of the Union Colony, the area’s agricultural heritage, water usage, and growth over time. Learn the stories of some of Northern Colorado’s most famous residents like “Rattlesnake” Kate Slaughterback, Nathan Cook Meeker and more! Exhibit ongoing.

Seven Symphonic Portraits: A Weld County Reflection

Composer Dylan Fixmer spent many long hours discovering the rich stories that make up Greeley and Weld County’s past and present. He traveled city streets, learned the landscape, met colorful characters, and researched the interviews held in the archives of the Greeley Museums. As he explored, music began to form in his mind. The resulting music he composed paints portraits of the people who have called Greeley and Weld County home. Broken into seven movements, the piece explores the hopes, dreams, struggles, and shortcomings that bind us all together in our search for utopia.

Fixmer also worked with the Greeley Museums staff to create a companion exhibit, which explores each of the seven themes through images and objects held in the Museums’ collections. Located in the Garden Level Lobby of the Greeley History Museum, visitors can discover the music and stories that make up this journey through our shared history. Exhibit open November 16, 2023 through July 2025.

Viewfinder: Through the Lens of Time

At their most basic, the machines we call cameras all do the same thing. They capture light. In 1839, Louis-Jacques Mande Daguerre figured out how to transfer that light onto copper, allowing us to record and preserve images for the future. These amazing mechanisms go back nearly 200 years – and have continued to evolve ever since. Journey behind the lens and discover how cameras developed into the digital tools of today. Exhibit open through January 2025.

Reporting from Greeley

Dedicated to the history of printing, this exhibit includes historic photos, stereotype mats, and turn-of-the-century printing equipment including an 1899 Chandler and Price treadle press. The building that houses the Greeley History Museum was originally built in 1929 for the Greeley Tribune. Exhibit ongoing.

Policies

  • Food and beverages are not allowed in the galleries.
  • No backpacks allowed in the galleries.
  • Photography: Non-flash photography welcome except in special exhibitions. No tripods or selfie sticks allowed. Commercial photography allowed with prior permission from Museum Manager.
  • City ordinance does not permit smoking, including electronic cigarettes and other vaping devices, in the museum or within 25 feet of any of the building entrances.
  • No pets allowed. Service animals are welcome.
  • Please silence electronic devices while in the museum.

 

The Greeley History Museum is part of Museums for All, offering reduced admission for individuals and families receiving food assistance. Present your Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) card and a valid ID at visitor services. Reduced admission is $3 per person for up to four individuals per EBT card. Welcome!

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Greeley History Museum

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Greeley Museums

Greeley Museums

Greeley Museums collects, preserves, interprets, and shares the history of northeastern Colorado.

4 days ago

Greeley Museums
🎅 Celebrate the season the old-fashioned way at Centennial Village Museum's Homesteader’s Holiday! Join us December 7 and 8 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. for holiday cheer and family-friendly fun! From making crafts to strolling through the festively decorated historical village, there’s something for everyone. And don’t forget to stop in at Selma’s Store to pick up gifts for everyone on your list! Register online at: app.amilia.com/store/en/City-of-Greeley/api/Activity/Detail?activityId=xjvze70 ... See MoreSee Less
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5 days ago

Greeley Museums
Pictured here in the bottom right corner, Charles Ovid Plumb, a descendant of Union Colony pioneers, lived to see 102 years and did not waste a moment of it! A graduate of the Greeley High School class of 1912, and the State Agricultural College in 1916, he enlisted in the United States Army at the outbreak of World War I in 1917. After the war, Charles became a local farmer and got involved in the Greeley community. He became Weld County’s first 4-H leader in 1921, and in the 1930s served as a Weld County Commissioner. Later he was a founding officer, chairman, and board member of the Weld County Agriculture Advisory Council, a board member of the Mountain States Beet Growers Association, Weld County Health Association, and the Weld County Health Department Advisory Board. ... See MoreSee Less
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7 days ago

Greeley Museums
Interested in bringing back a recipe from bygone days? In looking through several cookbooks in our collection from the early 1900s, we found that recipes for vinegar candy 🍬 weren’t uncommon at all. Our thought is that they might’ve been the sour candy of the day. If you try it out (or have tried some in the past), please let us know what it tastes like!This recipe comes from the "Rocky Mountain Cook Book: For High Altitude Cooking" printed in 1903. ... See MoreSee Less
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2 weeks ago

Greeley Museums
🎄Step back in time with us this holiday season! Join us for Homesteader’s Holiday at Centennial Village Museum on December 7 and 8, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. for festive decorations, family activities, crafts and photo ops with Cowboy Santa! This year you can register ahead of time at app.amilia.com/store/en/City-of-Greeley/api/Activity/Detail?activityId=xjvze70 ... See MoreSee Less
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2 weeks ago

Greeley Museums
Built in 1904 at the corner of 11th Avenue and 16th Street, the Greeley Hospital was considered the most modern, up-to-date, and well-planned health care facility of its kind for the time. Historian Carol Rein Shwayder wrote, “Many of “us” Greeley natives can claim to have been born in that building and many of our family received care there as patients.”It closed when the new Weld County General Hospital (now North Colorado Medical Center) was built in 1952. The building reopened in 1953 as the Weld County Department of Social Services. From 1958 to 1979, it found another life as the Weld County Nursing Home. It was then converted into the University Apartment Complex and is now University Plaza Apartments-Senior Living. ... See MoreSee Less
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