Pilgrim Hall MuseumDescriptionPilgrim Hall Museum is a gallery museum in the center of historic Plymouth, Massachusetts. Built in 1824, it is the nation's oldest continuously operating public museum. It showcases many original possessions of the early Pilgrims and their descendants, including one of Myles Standish's swords, Governor Bradford's Bible, the great chair of William Brewster, and the earliest sampler made in America, embroidered by the teenage daughter of Myles Standish. Among the permanent exhibits there is also the skeleton of the Sparrow-Hawk, a ship wrecked on Cape Cod in 1626 that lay buried in the sand until 1863.
Entrance FeeAdults: $6 Children (age 5-17): $3 Seniors: $5
Operating HoursFrom 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., 7 days a week. Closed Christmas Day and for the month of January.
Getting ThereFrom Plymouth Rock, walk north on Water Street and up the hill on Chilton Street.
75 Court Street (Route 3A) Plymouth, MA 02360
Phone: (508) 746-1620
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