If you are short on time and cash but want to support local artists and learn a lot of history, this is an ideal museum. I loved Todd Gieg’s Narrow Gauge Diorama and accompanying videos. The museum is open Thursday and Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and the second Saturday of the month from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Admission is $8 for adults; $5 for Lynn residents; $2 with an EBT or WIC card; and $0 for children under 12, Lynn Museum members, students, NEMA members, and Saturday visitors. You have a high chance of visiting free of charge! The main entrance is wheelchair accessible, and the museum has an elevator. Seating is available on the second floor near the diorama. Some of the exhibit space on the second floor suffers from low lighting. The gift shop has an impressive range...
   Read moreThe setting is absolutely stunning. Our family celebrated our Mother's Glorious Home going there and it couldn't have been a more perfect setting. She was a lifelong (79 year) resident of Lynn and the artifacts and old relics were a perfect compliment to the dignified and respectful ceremony we had in her memory. The staff was courteous, respectful and polite. Elena went above and beyond to accommodate our family and she did it with grace and honor. I can't say enough wonderful things about this location. So grateful to have had the chance to celebrate the life of my Glorious Mother...P.C.T.C.F. 💜 IF anyone has the chance to even visit this place...TAKE IT! It's well worth it. Thank you doesn't even cover...
   Read moreDuring the 1800's, Lynn, Massachusetts was the "Shoe Capital of the World". Economics, fires, taxation contributed to it's rise and fall. Leadership of the city has now changed this seaport city to a creative economy of the Arts. Lynn City Hall has excited the hearts of many in the entertainment world. It is a "Big" baseball town in the newly revived Fraiser Field, readily accessible from...
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