To select a museum, click “Details/Reserve”, then select which Pass to reserve.
Mercer Museum & Fonthill Castle
84 South Pine Street, Doylestown, PA 18901
215-345-0210
https://www.mercermuseum.org/
[Details/Reserve]
The Mercer Museum and Fonthill Castle are two poured-in-place concrete castles designed and built by gentleman anthropologist and tile maker Henry Mercer in the early 20th century. Located in Doylestown, PA, both structures—one built as a museum, the other as his home—now house his collections, each equally interesting as architecture. The museum complex features local and national traveling exhibits; a collection of over 50,000 pre-Industrial tools; a research library focused on the history of Bucks County and the surrounding region; and a gift shop. Fonthill Castle houses the famed decorative Moravian tiles Mercer produced during the American Arts & Crafts Movement.
Categories: Architecture, Crafts, Family, History
Pass Type: Circulating Pass (must be picked up and returned to the branch)
Pass Benefits
This pass admits 4 people (6 and up). Children 5 and under are free.
Please check with this site to find out if they required timed tickets to enter. Library passes will be good for daily admission at both Mercer Museum and at Fonthill Castle throughout the holiday season. Daily admission includes Mercer Museum Timed Admission and Fonthill Castle Winter Wonderland Daily Guided Tours.
Two other ways of visiting Fonthill Castle for the holidays are Holiday Evening Tours on weekday nights and Holiday Lights Meander on weekends in December. These are not included in daily admission. Library pass users will receive our discounted member rate for those programs.
Donated by the Souderton-Telford Rotary
Penn Museum
3260 South Street , Philadelphia, PA 19104
215-898-4000
https://www.penn.museum/
[Details/Reserve]
The Penn Museum is located in a unique Arts and Crafts and Eclectic style building on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania. It is home to over a million artifacts, ethnographic objects, and archaeological finds from Africa, Asia, the Americas, and the Mediterranean. Begun in 1887, the collection is organized in eleven curatorial sections documenting the peoples of Africa, Asia, Oceania, and the Americas. Many of the items in the collection were obtained directly through its own field excavations or anthropological research. Highlights include a 16th century commemorative plaque from Benin; an old stone monument from Guatemala depicting a ruler surrounded by Mayan glyph writing; the Sphinx of Ramses II, the largest ancient Egyptian sphinx in the Western Hemisphere; a statue of a seated pharaoh Ramses II (1290–1224 BCE); a Sioux headdress, a war bonnet made around 1890; a cloisonné statue of a lion from the Qing Dynasty era; a large marble relief once part of a commemorative monument for the Roman emperor Domitian (95 CE); an amphora made in Athens around 535 BCE which depicts the death of Achilles in battle; and a terracotta sculpture of a female head of the type typically attached to the roof tiles of an Etruscan temple of the 4th century BCE. There is a gift shop and a café on the premises.
Categories: Architecture, Crafts, Family, History
Pass Type: Circulating Pass (must be picked up and returned to the branch)
Pass Benefits
This pass admits two adults (18 and up) and all dependent children (6-17) in a patron's household. Children 5 and under are free.