tangier history museum
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It was full of artifacts from the area considering the island is so small. Make sure and watch the short video. It will tell you a lot about the area.
If you have three dollars and some time to kill, check out the museum. You get a nicely produced video on the background of the island and its status today. You also get various displays on the various crises that have afflicted the island (loss of land mass, crabbing regulations, hurricanes, etc.). We learned a lot about the island this way and you would be missing out if you came to Tangier without learning its history. Unfortunately, they no longer rent out kayaks, which the island is sorely in need of.
The museum is nice but the best part was the three part video that you can watch..It helps you to understand the island better. The mayor speaks in it and we met him personally..A wonderful person..
Reasonably priced. Great displays of the island history. I loved the photo slideshow and video of island life.
For the three dollar admission there is a lot to absorb about the history of the island. Some of the exhibits are hand written and some are humorous.
Very well done small museum that does a great job of laying out history and challenges of this little community island
very informative. Great wall of servicemen/women from Tangier that served. Video explains so much about their lifestyle. Mini souvenir shop inside also.
Interesting information about a part of history we often don't think about. It gave us reason to think about how life on Tangier has evolved from the 17th century to today.
This is the only museum on the island. It's small, but filled to the brim with information, pictures, artifacts, videos, and so much more. My friends and I enjoyed our time walking about and reading. There is a short video in the back of the museum where you can really here from the people of the island.Everything was well arranged and the quality was excellent. It was all very interesting and we had a blast. There is a small fee to get in, but it's well worth it. There is also a small gift area with items made by people on the island, so it's a great place to pick up a souvenir.
I was very impressed by the number and quality of the exhibits at the Tangier History Museum. It really needed more than a short visit to absorb all that it had to offer. The staff is excellent and very helpful. The museum gives an great overview of the history of the island and also the life of the residents. I wish we'd gone back in the second day we were on the island because I didn't have time to take in everything there was to see and read.
Remember, it is a very tiny island museum and they do what they can. Having qualified my comments, they have done a great job and it is truly a labor of love. Many of their information tags are hand printed (very time consuming and well done). Lots of interesting memorabilia and a 17 m. big screen video about the island's history. The friendly staff were very happy to discuss the archaic "Tangier Speak" with me that is so fascinating. Having family in Cornwall, I could make out some of the same pronunciations that have lasted here for centuries. Definitely worth a visit!!!
The Tangier museum is very small like the island itself but has a huge history. The museum details the history and use of the island from the Native Americans, Revolutionary War, War of 1812, etc. The history of the watermen is great. It details their rise to their current plight of the job. The museum is a great anthropology of the island. It is a must visit to understand this unique island in the middle of the Chesapeake.
a small museum but a lot of proud history. I think they graduated 7 seniors from the HS this past year. 6 went onto college and 1 in military.
I thought this a very interesting and informative little museum. Tangier Island has an interesting history and the displays here tell it well, not thoroughly, but well. Be sure to watch the videos that are available. Any visit to Tangier Island should include a stop at this museum.
It is a very tiny museum, it is about history and life on the island, the people the language ( the local accent "Hoi Toiders" of the Outer Banks of North Carolina) and the industry (British descendants). The entrance fee is $3 per person. There is no public toilet in this island, if you are desperate it is one place to go. I love the chairs outside which is in crab shape, which represents the major industry in here.