This article was split from List of museums in Texas
The list of museums in the Texas Panhandle encompasses museums defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing. Museums that exist only in cyberspace (i.e., virtual museums) are not included. Also included are non-profit art galleries and exhibit spaces.
The Texas Panhandle is a region of the U.S. state of Texas consisting of the northernmost 26 counties in the state. The panhandle is a rectangular area bordered by New Mexico to the west and Oklahoma to the north and east. The Handbook of Texas defines the southern border of Swisher County to be the southern boundary of the Texas Panhandle region.
According to the Panhandle Regional Planning Commission, the following counties constitute the Texas Panhandle: [1]
Museum name | Image | City | County | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Armstrong County Museum | Claude | Armstrong | Art, local history and culture, includes the museum, art gallery, the historic Gem Theatre, Hall of Honor, a one-room school house | [2] | |
Charles and Mary Ann Goodnight Ranch State Historic Site | Goodnight | Armstrong | Operated by the Armstrong County Museum, late 19th-century pioneer home of rancher Charles Goodnight, visitor center exhibits about the Goodnights, bison, and transportation and settlement of the area National Register of Historic Places listings in Armstrong County, Texas | [3] | |
Old Jail Museum | Silverton | Briscoe | Prison | [4] | |
Carson County Square House Museum | Panhandle | Carson | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark, National Register of Historic Places | [5] | |
Castro County Museum | Dimmitt | Castro | [6] | ||
Childress County Heritage Museum | Childress | Childress | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [7] | |
Collingsworth County Museum | Wellington | Collingsworth | Art, local history and period artifacts | [8] | |
XIT Museum | Dalhart | Dallam | Artifacts from the old XIT Ranch era | [9] | |
Deaf Smith County Historical Museum | Hereford | Deaf Smith | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [10] | |
Saints' Roost Museum | Clarendon | Donley | Clarendon was nicknamed "Saints' Roost" in the 19th century, for its proliferation of local churches and absence of saloons | [11] | |
Museum name | Image | City | County | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Devils Rope Barbed Wire Museum | McLean | Gray | History of barbed wire in Texas | [12] | |
Freedom Museum | Pampa | Gray | Military equipment and memorabilia, housed in a building erected in 1939 by the WPA | [13] | |
McLean-Alanreed Area Museum | McLean | Gray | Ranching heritage, Titanic Shipwreck connection, Mclean WWII POW encampment | [14] | |
White Deer Land Museum | Pampa | Gray | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark, National Register of Historic Places | [15] | |
Woody Guthrie Folk Music Center | Pampa | Gray | Guthrie lived in Pampa 1928–1937, and attended Pampa High School | [16] | |
Museum name | Image | City | County | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bob Wills Museum | Turkey | Hall | Life of musician Bob Wills, who spent much of his boyhood in Hall County | [17] | |
Hall County Heritage Hall Museum | Memphis | Hall | Local history | [18] | |
Turkey Roost Museum | Turkey | Hall | Local history | [19] | |
Stationmaster's House Museum | Spearman | Hansford | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [20] | |
XIT Museum | Dalhart | Hartley County | Collection of artifacts from the XIT Ranch (1885 - 1912) | [21] | |
Citadelle Art Foundation Museum | Canadian | Hemphill | Originally housed the First Baptist Church, later serving as a residential home for the Abraham family who conveyed the property and its grounds to the city. | [22] | |
River Valley Pioneer Museum | Canadian | Hemphill | Historic interpretation of the settlement period in the eastern Texas Panhandle | [23] | |
Hutchinson County Historical Museum | Borger | Hutchinson | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [24] | |
Isaac McCormick Pioneer Cottage | Stinnett | Hutchinson | Constructed in 1899, McCormick was the area's first settler | [25] | |
Museum name | Image | City | County | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wolf Creek Heritage Museum | Lipscomb | Lipscomb | Local culture, history and art | [26] | |
Window on the Plains Museum and Art Center | Dumas | Moore | Formerly the Moore County Historical Museum, features period home, farming and business displays | [27] | |
Museum of the Plains | Perryton | Ochiltree | History, artifacts and period pieces | [28] | |
Adrian Lion's Club Farm and Ranch Museum | Adrian | Oldham | Antique farm equipment | [29] | |
Dot's Mini Museum | Vega | Oldham | Only available to be viewed from the outside | [30] | |
Julians Bivins Museum | Boys Ranch | Oldham | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [31] | |
Milburn-Price Culture Museum | Vega | Oldham | Non-profit, local history | [32] | |
Oldham County Heritage Farm & Ranch Museum | Vega | Oldham | Antique farm and ranch equipment | [33] | |
Museum name | Image | City | County | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parmer County Pioneer Heritage Museum | Friona | Parmer | Local history | [34] | |
Amarillo College Natural History Museum | Amarillo | Potter | Mammals, birds, fish, insects and | [35] | |
Amarillo Historical Museum | Amarillo | Potter | Local history | [36] | |
Amarillo Museum of Art | Amarillo | Potter | Varied collection | [37] | |
Amarillo Railroad Museum | Amarillo | Potter | Model railway layouts | [38] | |
American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame and Museum | Amarillo | Potter | History and heritage of the American Quarter Horse | [39] | |
Cadillac Ranch | Amarillo | Potter and Randall | Located along the old U.S. Route 66 Created by businessman Stanley Marsh III | [40] | |
Don Harrington Discovery Center | Amarillo | Potter | Hands-on exhibits on natural history and core sciences | [41] | |
Harrington House | Amarillo | Potter | 20th-century house with French and English antiques and fine decorative items< | [42] | |
Jack Sisemore Traveland RV Museum | Amarillo | Potter | Collection of vintage RV | [43] | |
Kwahadi Museum of the American Indian | Amarillo | Potter | Art and culture of Pueblo and Plains people | [44] | |
Texas Air & Space Museum | Amarillo | Potter | Aviation | [45] | |
Texas Pharmacy Museum | Amarillo | Potter | Part of Texas Tech University in the Health Sciences Center | [46] | |
Museum name | Image | City | County | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum | Canyon | Randall | Campus of West Texas A&M University | [47] | |
Memory Lane Car Museum | Pecos | Reeves | [48] | ||
Texas Rodeo Hall of Fame | Pecos | Reeves | American West | [49] | |
West of The Pecos Museum | Pecos | Reeves | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [50] | |
Roberts County Museum | Miami | Roberts | Local history | [51] | |
Sherman County Depot Museum | Stratford | Sherman | Located in the Santa Fe Depot building | [52] | |
Swisher County Museum | Tulia | Swisher | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [53] | |
Old Mobeetie Jail Museum | Mobeetie | Wheeler | Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | [54] | |
Pioneer West Museum | Shamrock | Wheeler | 25-room museum located in the 1928 Reynolds hotel | [55] | |
Tower Station and U-Drop Inn | Shamrock | Wheeler | Restored 1936 Art Deco gas station/inn/restaurant on Route 66, now houses a museum, visitors’ center, gift shop and the city's Chamber of Commerce | [56] | |
Randall County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 140,753. Its county seat is Canyon. The county was created in 1876 and later organized in 1889. It is named for Horace Randal, a Confederate brigadier general killed at the Battle of Jenkins Ferry. The reason the county name differs from his is because the bill creating the county misspelled Randal's name.
Potter County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 118,525. Its county seat is Amarillo. The county was created in 1876 and organized in 1887. It is named for Robert Potter, a politician, signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence, and the Texas Secretary of the Navy. Potter County is included in the Amarillo metropolitan area.
Oldham County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 1,758. Its county seat is Vega. The county was created in 1876 and organized in 1881. Oldham County is included in the Amarillo, TX Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Carson County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 5,807. The county seat is Panhandle. The county was founded in 1876 and later organized in 1888. It is named for Samuel Price Carson, the first secretary of state of the Republic of Texas.
Dalhart is a city in Dallam and Hartley counties in the U.S. state of Texas, and the county seat of Dallam County. The population was 7,930 at the 2010 census.
The Texas Historical Commission is an agency dedicated to historic preservation within the U.S. state of Texas. It administers the National Register of Historic Places for sites in Texas.
Harrison Barrett was a former slave born in about 1845 to slave parents from Louisiana, Simon and Eliza Barrett. He had two brothers and two sisters. After the emancipation of the slaves in 1865, Barrett searched for his family members. He was able to gather all together except for one sister. In 1889 he purchased land east of the San Jacinto River in Harris County, Texas, for fifty cents an acre, and named the area Barrett Settlement. It was one of the largest holdings in Harris County to be acquired by a former slave. He is interred with his wife Annie Jones Barrett, along with four other family members, in the nearby cemetery.
Reedy Chapel A.M.E. Church is a historic African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) church located at 2013 Broadway in Galveston, Texas. The church's congregation was founded in 1848 by enslaved African Americans and, following emancipation in 1865, the church was organized as Texas's first A.M.E. congregation in 1866. Reedy Chapel A.M.E. Church was one of locations of the public reading of General Order No. 3 by Union general Gordon Granger on June 19, 1865 which officially declared emancipation in Texas. The annual celebration of this declaration among African Americans continues today as the Juneteenth holiday.
Der Stadt Friedhof is a pioneer cemetery established in 1846 along Barons Creek on the corner of East Schubert Street and Lee Street, in Fredericksburg, Texas. It is the oldest known cemetery within Fredericksburg and is the final resting place for many of the original German colonists who arrived when John O. Meusebach opened up the area to settlement.
Adobe Walls is a ghost town in Hutchinson County, 17 miles (27 km) northeast of Stinnett, in the U.S. state of Texas. It was established in 1843 as a trading post for buffalo hunters and local Native American trade in the vicinity of the Canadian River. It later became a ranching community. Historically, Adobe Walls is the site of two decisive battles between Native Americans and settlers. In November 1864 First Battle of Adobe Walls, Native Americans successfully repelled attacking troops led by Kit Carson. Ten years later, on June 27, 1874, known as the Second Battle of Adobe Walls, civilians at the Adobe Walls trading post successfully fought off an attack by a war party of mainly Comanche and Cheyenne warriors led by the Comanche chief Quanah Parker. The second battle led to a military campaign which resulted in Indian relocation to Indian Territory.
El Paisano Ranch is located in Jim Wells County, Texas, United States. It is one of the oldest working ranches in Texas, operating since 1835, which was ten years before Texas gained statehood in the Union. In November 2014, it was recognized by the Texas Agriculture Commission as a ranch that had been in continuous agriculture production for more than 150 years at the Texas State Capital. El Paisano was originally granted to Ramon de la Garza on March 25, 1830 by the Mexican State of Tamaulipas as The Paisano Grant. The original plot was 11070 acres, with 6184 acres in Jim Wells County, 3456 acres in Kleberg County, and 1430 acres in Brooks County.
The following is a list of state or nationally designated historic sites and buildings in Wood County, Texas.
The JA Ranch is a historic cattle ranch in the Palo Duro Canyon in Armstrong County, Texas. Founded in 1876 by Charles Goodnight and John George Adair, it is the oldest cattle ranching operation in the Texas Panhandle. Its headquarters area was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960 for its association with Goodnight, one of the most influential cattle barons of the late 19th century. The ranch is an ongoing business, operated by Adair's descendants.
John George Adair, sometimes known as Jack Adair, born in County Laois, Ireland, was a Scots-Irish businessman and landowner, financier of JA Ranch in the Texas Panhandle.