The full sweep of New Mexico history is timelined in the New Mexico History Museum. From Ancestral Pueblans to pueblans to Spanish to Mexicans to Americans to the Atomic bomb – it’s all here. There was a nice section on the music of New Mexico (including Route 66 and some Western songs). I thought this would be represented in the gift shop, but, sadly, no.
Georgia O’Keefe Museum
We spent some time walking around Santa Fe and visiting the Georgia O’Keefe Museum. So it turns out I’m not a big fan of O’Keefe… or abstract… or abstract-ish paintings. There are over 240 art galleries in Santa Fe. Which is 240 more than I entered.

Santa Fe Plaza
By coincidence we also visited Santa Fe six years ago over the Fourth of July. I took better pictures this trip.
Tinkertown
The Tinkertown Museum in Sandia Park is one of the ten best small museums… they say. It was funky museum number two today on the Turquoise Trail. This privately held museum features the work of the late Ross Ward: hand carved and painted minatures in various dioramas.
Casa Grande Trading Post
We spent a non-traditional Fourth of July driving down the Turquoise Trail from Santa Fe to Albuquerque. We found a couple funky little museums along the way. First, the Casa Grande Trading Post, Petting Zoo & Cerrillos Turquoise Mining Museum. We were the only visitors that morning. It was a bit of a challenge to find it on the dirt roads of Cerillos, New Mexico.
Pecos National Historical Park
We decided to not drive the freeways home over the extended July 4th holiday weekend. Instead we decided to stay in Santa Fe, New Mexico until after the holiday. So from Tucumcari we took the road less traveled, New Mexico state route 104 to Las Vegas, then to Pecos National Historical Park. (New Mexico also has a Las Vegas, but it’s much less crowded than Nevada’s.)
Tucumcari Historical Museum
Another small town museum, the Tucumcari Historical Museum. Like many small town museums, it contains an eclectic mix of small town memorabilia. One recommendation to visit described it as going through someone’s attic. (A characterization I should not have used in front of the docent.) There was lots of stuff but minimal organization. Nonetheless, we enjoyed our stop there.
Air Capital of the World: Wichita
Wichita, Kansas is the Air Capital of the World. The claim seemed spurious until we visited the Kansas Aviation Museum. Tens of thousands of aircraft have been manufactured here; hundreds have been designed here.
Big Things Small Town
Big things in a small town provided a place to walk around not far off the interstate. As their website proudly proclaims, Casey, Illinois hosts seven Guinness-certified “world’s largest” things. They have nine additional large things that are not big enough to be certified as “largest.”
National Packard Museum
We had a nostalgic visit to the National Packard Museum. Nostalgic not because I ever owned a Packard motor car, but because of the old Packard Electric. I did not realize that the company started as Packard Electric making transformers and cable. I only thought of them as making wiring harnesses for cars. For six boring months in 1966 I drew some of those wiring harnesses.