Tour the Wisconsin Historical Museum in Madison, WI Diamond Tours
"Logging Camp Scene" by Sevand O Lund
Boys Brown Jacket 1950-1952 Boys Brown Jacket 1950-1952
Painting "Old Abe the Live Wisconsin War Eagle"
Girls Kimono 1940-1960 Girls Kimono 1940-1960
Soap Box Derby Hat 1952 Soap Box Derby Hat 1952

Visiting the Wisconsin Historical Museum

During your visit to the Wisconsin Historical Museum, explore Wisconsin history from prehistoric times to the present through permanent and temporary exhibits featuring artifacts, photographs, full-scale dioramas, audio-visual presentations and interactive multimedia programs. Be sure to stop by Wisconsin Historical Museum Store to shop for gifts and souvenirs unique to the Wisconsin Historical Museum.

Permanent Exhibits

People of the Woodlands

People of the Woodlands examines the lives of Wisconsin’s Native American people. Step inside a replica of a house a Native American family would have lived in between A.D. 1100 and 1300, then compare it to the inside of a wigwam, a Native American family’s winter home. Learn about the “Era of Exchange,” a time when Europeans came to Wisconsin to trade with Indians as you explore displays featuring fur, food and footwear the Indians exchanged for manufactured goods such as tools, fabric and jewelry. Additionally the exhibit showcases Native American clothing and bags with intricate beadwork designs made by the Indians.

Frontier Wisconsin

Explore the 1800s Frontier Wisconsin in Frontier Wisconsin. Discover how surface deposits of lead, zinc and copper ore led Native Americans to begin mining in southwestern Wisconsin and how the minerals soon attracted Europeans to the region.  Learn how federal government surveyors divided the land and sold parcels to European settlers through artifacts once used by federal government surveyors. Photographers in the exhibit tell the story of the first railroads in Wisconsin built during the 1850s.

The Immigrant State

The Immigrant State explores the reasons immigrants came to Wisconsin during the mid-19th century. Within the exhibit learn about affordable farmland, better paying jobs and the other reasons immigrants were drawn to Wisconsin. See how the immigrants made difficult decisions about which items to bring with them and which items to leave behind on their journey to a new land. Other exhibit displays explore the customs and cultures many of Wisconsin’s immigrants brought with them from their homelands.

Making a Living

See Wisconsin at work. Making a Living chronicles Wisconsin’s early important industries such as lumbering, to its well-known brand names of today including Kleenex, Johnson Wax, Miller Beer and Harley Davidson.

Sense of Community

Sense of Community is an exhibit that explores Wisconsin progressivism and how it helped to establish important labor laws that would eventually be adopted across the United States. Learn how Wisconsin’s idea of public interest politics and a strong clean government set precedent for political, social and economic reform. Discover how county and state fairs were first established in the 19th century as a means for farmers to meet and discuss the latest farming techniques and equipment. On the museum’s fourth floor you can admire Madison’s Capitol Square, a major center for the expression of community life and political demonstrations for many years.

Shopping in the Museum Store

Take home a piece of Wisconsin from the Museum Store. Gifts and souvenirs unique to the Wisconsin Historical Museum are available to purchase.

Travel Tips

-          The Wisconsin Historical Museum is ADA complaint.

-          There are a number of restaurants within a short distance from the Wisconsin Historical Museum. For a complete list of restaurants in downtown Madison, contact the Madison Convention and Visitors Bureau or Downtown Madison, Inc.

Painting "Tasso in Prison" by Caroline L.A. Tank
Painting of "Horses" by Caroline L.A. Tank
Quilt "Courthouse Square", 1849
Quit from 1880-1890 See the Extensive Quilt Collection
Painting "Fitting Out" by Kurt E Schaldach
Wisconsin Historical Museum Explore Art and History
Earthenware, Norse Pottery from 1903-1913 Earthenware, Norse Pottery 1903-1913
Eggcup, Badger Pottery from 1920-1940 Eggcup, Badger Pottery 1920-1940
Braves T-Shirt 1953-1957 Braves T-Shirt 1953-1957
Painting "Scutanawbequon, Lake Monona"
"Peshtigo Fire III, The River" by Mel Kishner
"Bald Eagles & Young" by Edmund W Ropinski
"Bald Eagles & Young" by Edmund W Ropinski
Painting "House Party" by Lavern Kammerude
Painting "McCormick Reaper" by Isaac F Eaton
"The Horrors of War" by Caroline L.A. Tank
Portrait Painting: Unidentified Couple Portrait Painting: Unidentified Couple
Baby Bonnet 1790-1820 Baby Bonnet 1790-1820
Painting "Skating Party" by Gibson Byrd