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Inside one of Seattle's kid-friendly museums
Kinderfreundliche Museen in Seattle

6 Under-the-Radar Museums in Seattle


Adults and children look at costumes in glass cases
Hallo, mein Name ist Jen!

Vermont travel writer Jen Rose Smith covers adventure, remote places, and traditional cuisine from a home base in the Green Mountains. Her articles have appeared in National Geographic Adventure, American Way, Nexos, Condé Nast Traveler, Backpacker, AFAR, Rolling Stone, USA Today, and Outside Online.

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Hi, I'm Jen!

Vermont travel writer Jen Rose Smith covers adventure, remote places, and traditional cuisine from a home base in the Green Mountains. Her articles have appeared in National Geographic Adventure, American Way, Nexos, Condé Nast Traveler, Backpacker, AFAR, Rolling Stone, USA Today, and Outside Online.

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Seattle’s biggest museums are justifiably famous: from the Museum of Pop Culture (MoPOP) to the Seattle Art Museum (SAM), they house world-class collections worth planning a trip around. Such headliners are just the start of the city’s museum scene, however. Lesser-known museums in Seattle include local treasures dedicated to telecommunications, bad art, and even rubber chickens. Whether you’re looking for fun Seattle date ideas or taking a deep dive into some unusual history, these under-the-radar spots are a great place to start.

Seattle Pinball Museum

Illuminated vintage pinball machines in a row
Play is free with the price of admission to the Seattle Pinball Museum. | Bildquelle: darthval / Tripadvisor

Play your way through pinball history.

Find more than 50 classic and modern pinball machines at this hands-on museum, an “interactive display of kinetic art” built from the collections of Seattle-area aficionados. While the selection rotates frequently, some recent highlights have included a 1978 Close Encounters of the Third Kind game and the 1993 Twilight Zone machine that some consider among the best pinball games ever made. After paying the price of admission, you can play as long as you want.

Don’t miss: Vintage sodas and treats for sale at the snack bar.

Last Resort Fire Department Museum

Intersection with large pale stone building on corner
The museum's oldest fire truck dates to 1834. | Bildquelle: CineCam / Shutterstock

Antique fire trucks and more.

Housed in the 1928 Seattle Fire Department Headquarters at Pioneer Square, the free Last Resort Fire Department Museum is a trove of antique firefighting gear. Five historic Seattle Fire Department trucks are on display—the oldest is a hand-pumped version that dates back to 1834. Displays of firefighting artifacts include uniforms, helmets, and nozzles that firefighters carried into blazes past, and the museum’s slideshow of historic Seattle fire stations provides another window to a bygone era.

Don’t miss: Images from the 1889 Great Seattle Fire that devastated 25 city blocks.

Official Bad Art Museum of Art (OBAMA)

Glitter lettering spells out "The OBAMA Room" housed in ornate gold frame
The museum is located inside a café. | Bildquelle: keith / Tripadvisor

Sometimes bad art can be great.

Bad art is in the eye of the beholder: Visitors to Capitol Hill’s small Official Bad Art Museum of Art (OBAMA) love its black velvet paintings, creepy clown portraits, and paint-by-number finds. The free museum offers a taste of Seattle’s quirky roots while doubling as a local hangout, since it’s set inside the happening Cafe Racer, beloved for its frequent live music shows, poetry slams, and open-mic nights featuring a full band.

Don’t miss: A painting created entirely out of multicolored marshmallow Peeps.

Connections Museum Seattle

Wires connect vintage electronic panels
Tour guides explain the technology on display. | Bildquelle: phutton11 / Tripadvisor

Calling all telecommunications nerds.

Step into the era of switchboard operators and antique telephones at the Connections Museum Seattle. Its exhibits include functioning examples of 20th-century “switching systems” used to connect callers on landlines. Tour guides help decode the complex technology and history, from telegraphs and switchboards to transmitters, cables, and racks full of amateur radio equipment. The museum also has a replica of the first telephone ever used, by Alexander Graham Bell, in 1876. Check the museum website for hours.

Don’t miss: The working antique and vintage telephones available for sale in the gift shop.

Rubber Chicken Museum

Rubber chicken in foreground with multiple rubber chickens visible in display cases behind
The museum is dedicated entirely to ... rubber chickens. | Bildquelle: Rubber Chicken Museum / Tripadvisor

Where the classic joke prop gets star treatment.

Tucked into the back of Archie McPhee—a novelty store dedicated to gag gifts, party supplies, and weird trinkets—the small Rubber Chicken Museum is a plastic poultry immersion. The free museum claims to have the world’s largest and smallest rubber chickens, on display alongside rubber Santa chickens, rubber-chicken stained glass artwork, and props used by television clown J.P Patches. Those seeking a deeper analysis can pause to read a short essay on the history of rubber chicken jokes, from vaudeville roots to the funny pages to the artisanally produced rubber chickens of Spain.

Don’t miss: Snapping a souvenir selfie with the world’s largest rubber chicken.

Museum of History & Industry (MOHAI)

Small marina with boats in front of large white building
The museum hosts permanent and temporary exhibitions. | Bildquelle: Cascade Creatives / Shutterstock

Highlighting Seattle history.

Local heritage is the draw at this landmark museum, which traces city history spanning Indigenous cultures and technological innovation. A permanent installation, True Northwest: The Seattle Journey, complements rotating themed exhibits on topics such as baseball history, Pacific Northwest artists, and Indigenous ways of knowing. Sparking nostalgia for longtime Seattleites are artifacts such as the old-school Rainier Beer “R” sign and a marquee from The Lusty Lady peep show building in downtown. The museum is located in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood.

Don’t miss: Families with children can pick up “Exploration and Innovation Packs” designed for kids aged 3–10.

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Entdecken Sie noch mehr Neues
Sehen Sie sich alle Touren in Seattle an
Touren und Tickets in 395
Aktivitäten in Seattle
Sehen Sie sich alle Aktivitäten in Seattle an
Inside one of Seattle's kid-friendly museums
Kinderfreundliche Museen in Seattle