Top 5 Odd Museums

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Top 5 odd museums
By Lili Ladaga | Wanderlust – Thu, Sep 29, 2011

The Louvre. The Guggenheim. MoMA. The Smithsonian -- these famous museums all feature world-class art, sculptures, etc. etc. But do they have barbed wire dioramas? Interactive SPAM exhibits? Or BAD art? (It's harder than it looks.)

If you're tired of looking at the Mona Lisa, Botticellis and the Venus de Milo, try one of these odd museums on your next vacation:

Kansas City Barbed Wire Museum: Yes, you read right: A museum dedicated to the long and storied history of the barbed wire. Also known as the "Devils Rope," the humble barbed wire was actually a key part of the taming of the American West. Bet you didn't know that there are hundreds of different varieties of barbed wire.

Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum: This Farmington, Michigan museum features hundreds of vintage coin-operated games and machines. Owner Marvin Yagoda has been collecting his marvelous mechanical machines since 1960 and made the World Almanac's list of 100 most unusual museums in the U.S. Don't forget to bring change.

National Yo-Yo Museum: You may think you're pro just because you can do The Sleeper and Walk the Cat, but you don't know anything about yo-yos, yo. This free museum in Chico, California, is the headquarters for the National Yo-Yo League and hosts the annual National Yo-Yo Contest. It's also home to "Big-Yo," the world's biggest working wood yo-yo, which weighs in at a gargantuan 265 pounds.

SPAM Museum: Who doesn't love SPAM and eggs in the morning? Or hearty French fry SPAM casserole for dinner? If you're a fan of the world's most (in)famous mystery meat, you're in luck: The SPAM Museum in Austin, Minnesota boasts more than 16,000 square feet of exhibits, movies, collectibles and of course, new recipes.

Toilet Seat Art Museum: When you get to San Antonio, Texas, do yourself a favor and forget the Alamo. What you need to remember is to visit the Toilet Seat Art Museum, where each of the more than 1,000 seats is carefully numbered, photographed and cataloged by owner and museum curator, Barney Smith. The only seat he doesn't have? One that functions.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
I'm looking forward to these:
The Museum of Questionable Medical Devices, Minneapolis, Mn
The Old Courthouse Museum, Sioux Falls, SD [currently showing 'Underwear: a brief exhibition of the history']
The Law Enforcement Museum, Justice Center, Cleveland, Oh
The Witch Dungeon & Witch History Museums, Salem, Ma
The Voodoo Museum, New Orleans, La

I visited the Spy Museum in DC a few months ago, that was a hoot! :D
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
In Houston at the Richey exit off I-45 where the Flying J is located, you go south on the frontage road and then turn right on Barren Springs. About 2 blocks is the National Museum of Funeral History. It's not nearly as creep as you'd think (and certainly not as creepy as the Museum of Questionable Medical Devices, which is just all kinds of creepy). First time I saw the sign for that museum I laughed at it, and wondered who'd go there, and just how creepy could it get? Turns out it wasn't creepy at all, and was quite fascinating.

The Funeral Museum has an impressive display of the fantasy coffins used in Ghana, Africa (Mercedes Benz, a lobster, a Yamaha outboard motor, a leopard, whatever best puts an exclamation mark on your life), a large exhibit on the lives and deaths of the Popes, an excellent Tomb of the Unknown Soldier exhibit, Japanese funerals, historical hearses, and among many others, an exhibit on presidential funerals which includes ammo used in the 12-gun salute at Gerald Ford's funeral, and the original "Eternal Flame" from JFK's gravesite in Arlington. It's actually pretty kewl, for a funeral museum. Seriously. And funerals are not my cup o' tea. It's like ten bucks to get in, and they have some neat things in the museum store, too. Their motto is, "Any day above ground is a good one," and I agree.
 
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