DACF Home → Bureaus & Programs → Bureau of Parks and Lands → Discover History & Explore Nature → History & Historic Sites → Colonial Pemaquid → Museum
The Museum and Visitor Center at Pemaquid
Begin your visit to Colonial Pemaquid with a visit to the museum and visitor center. Here you will see selections from more than 75,000 artifacts which archaeologists have excavated from the site of the fishing village and forts dating from the first quarter of the 17th century.
Displays feature scenes and items relating to the area's history, including the Wawenock tribe of Native Americans, a trading post, tavern, fishing, blacksmithing, and a typical archeological excavation. Other cases also house examples of English and European ceramics -- such as a German Bellarmine jug and samples of Delftware and Rheinish pottery, Portuguese and Spanish majolica, and Staffordshire combed slipware -- a variety of English glass bottles and stemware, pottery, hardware and small objects used in the home. Interestingly enough, an understanding of how many of the objects were used and appreciated has come from studying paintings of the Dutch School, which show items similar to the snuff boxes, jars, tiles, pipes, dishes and glass ware found at Pemaquid.
A diorama depicts what buildings might have looked like on the foundations thus far excavated at Pemaquid, which date across a 100 year period from 1630 through the mid-1700's.
The museum is open and staffed from Memorial Day weekend through September 1 every day from 9-5. Admission is part of the Colonial Pemaquid day use fee -- which includes the Fort, Fort House and Museum. Adults over 65 may enter free of charge. The phone number is 207-677-2423.