San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The San Joaquin County Historical Society and Museum is located at Micke Grove Regional Park, between Lodi, California and Stockton, California. It was established in 1966 by San Joaquin County and the San Joaquin County Historical Society.[1]
Formation | 1954 (Historical Society) / 1966 (Museum) |
---|---|
Type | Museum, Nonprofit |
Headquarters | 11793 N. Micke Grove Road, Lodi, CA 95240 |
Region | San Joaquin County, California |
Website | https://www.sanjoaquinhistory.org |
The museum has over 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2) of exhibit and work space. Their collections have grown from a few hundred items from the estate of William G. and Julia Harrison Micke to over 75,000 artifacts and over 500,000 documents and photos representative of the development of San Joaquin County. The museum was accredited by the American Alliance of Museums in 1973.[2]
The Museum operates a Docent Program, where adults take a one-year course in local history and education. Upon graduation, docents are expected to work as volunteer educators for various museum programs.[4]
The museum docents operate several living history programs for elementary school students throughout San Joaquin County. These programs help students learn about everyday life in the 19th and early 20th centuries, and provide context to the state history content that they learn in school.
The three primary living history programs are Valley Days, where students learn 19th century skills such as gold panning, blacksmithing, and corn grinding, Pioneer School, where students take a day of class in the Calaveras School House using the official California State Curriculum of 1884, and Farm to Fork, where students simulate the farming industry.
In 2023, $3.2 million was approved for a future Pioneer Village project by the San Joaquin County Historical Society.[5]
The museum docents give tours to visitors. The docents also operate the celebrated Grandmother's/Grandfather's Trunk program, where docents visit schools in pioneer clothing with trunks full of artifacts, which through interpretive explanation can help students learn about 19th century life.
The museum also hosts the archives of San Joaquin County, with over 500,000 documents and photos available to the public for research.[6] The archive includes:
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