The Aerospace Museum of California is one of aviation’s greatest showcases within a spacious modern facility at McClellan Business Park in Sacramento. The Museum provides a world class opportunity to learn about and celebrate aviation’s past, present and future.
The Crocker Art Museum was established in 1885 and is now one of the leading art museums in California. The Crocker serves as the primary regional resource for the study and appreciation of fine art.
First opened to the public in 1976, the California State Railroad Museum complex is one of Sacramento's largest and most popular visitor destinations. Over 500,000 visit the Museum annually, with guests traveling from throughout the world to experience this world-renowned facility.
Visitors to the Capitol can experience California’s rich history and witness the making of history through the modern lawmaking process. At the State Capitol, the past, present and future of California interact with equal force. The building serves as both a museum and the state’s working seat of government.
The California Museum, located in Sacramento, California, is a museum that celebrates the history, art, and culture of California. The museum is located in the downtown area, close to the California State Capitol building and other major Sacramento landmarks.
Sacramento Children’s Museum is designed for ages birth to eight years old to allow children to "learn-by-doing"! Museum is open by reservation only.
After a 14-year, $22 million restoration and rehabilitation, the Mansion is now open to the public as a museum. It also serves the citizens of California as the state’s official reception center for leaders from around the world. The Leland Stanford Mansion is a stunning example of the splendor and elegance of the Victorian era in California.
The Delta town of Locke, the only town in the United States exclusively built by Chinese-Americans for Chinese-Americans, feels like a place lost in time – as if the clocks all stopped a few years before World War II. Nowhere is this feeling more pervasive than at the magnificently preserved Dai Loy Museum.
The State Indian Museum, opened in 1940, depicts three major themes of California Indian life: Nature, Spirit, and Family. Native peoples lived prosperously for thousands of years in what is now California. All of the exhibits and photographs on display in the museum are presented with respect for those who went before us on this land and continue to live in California communities today.
Located adjacent to the beautiful rose gardens of McKinley Park, the Iva Gard Shepard Garden and Arts Center provides a meeting place for clubs whose main focus is in horticulture, flower arranging, conservation, history, antiques and the arts, including painting, photography, ceramics, metal work, weaving, and other related arts and crafts.