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Historic Blue Ridge

Cultural Heritage
Historic Sites
Museums
Historic Trails

Hickory Ridge Homestead


Courtesy of Boone Convention and Visitors BureauHickory Ridge Homestead is a living history North Carolina museum on the grounds of Horn in the West, the nation's oldest Revolutionary War drama, in Boone, North Carolina.
 
Staffed with interpreters in period clothing, the 18th century homestead gives visitors a feeling for the daily lives of early mountain settlers. The Hickory Ridge Homestead strives to recreate the atmosphere of a small mountain community around the time of the Revolutionary War and offers demonstrations in hearthside cooking, weaving and other crafts.
 
The Hickory Ridge Homestead museum offers hands-on education for children and adults, including workshops on tinsmithing, hearth cooking, and the crafting of candles, medicine bags, corn husk dolls, rabbit skin belt bags and trading beads. Visitors can also learn how to use natural fibers to create textiles.
 
The Hickory Ridge Homestead museum was created in 1980 to foster a better understanding of the life of the settlers in the Horn in the West outdoor drama. The drama premiered in 1952, and since that time has been seen by more than 1.4 million visitors. It is performed in the 2,500-seat Daniel Boone Theatre. Playwright Dr. Kermit Hunter also penned Unto These Hills, the popular outdoor drama in Cherokee, North Carolina.
 
Hickory Ridge Homestead Hours of Operation
The Hickory Ridge Homestead museum is open to visitors on weekends in the fall and spring. Hours are:
 
Saturday           9 am – 4 pm
Sunday             1 pm – 4 pm
 
During the summer, this North Carolina museum offers a variety of day camps for children.
 
Hickory Ridge Homestead Location
The Hickory Ridge Homestead Museum is located on Horn Avenue, just off NC 105 in downtown Boone, North Carolina.
 
Hickory Ridge Homestead
PO Box 295
Boone, NC 28607
(828) 264-2120
www.horninthewest.com/museum.htm