Gem County Historical Society Museum
First
opened in 1973, the primary focus of the museum is the interpretation of life in
early Emmett. Beginning with the Native Americans who first inhabited the
land, the contributions of the trappers, miners, and settlers who made the
irrigation system and the fruit industry possible are chronicled through a large
collection of photographs as well as full sized period displays of a general
store, a turn-of-the-century parlor, a laundry room, and a combined doctor's and
dentist's office. In addition, there is a special tribute to the men and women
who have served in the armed forces; Other museum highlights include period
style clothing, a rare hand hewn "laying out board" considered a
nicety by families coming west with all their belongings stuffed in a wagon, a
"coyote gun" used by area sheepherders, a ships lamp from the
Battleship Arizona, and a broom maker used from the 1880's through the
Depression.
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