The capital city
Glitz, glamour, golf and more
Center of the Blues Universe
Downstairs you’ll find a great selection of creative pieces including stationery, jewelry, maps and knick-knacks. Upstairs offers a display gallery you will not want to miss. Also, shop in the bridal registry.
Museum presenting the history of cotton and the crop's relationship to blues music.
Enjoy an exterior glimpse at over 50 historic homes. Brochure available at the Aberdeen Visitors Bureau.
A living home based educational/African cultural continuum museum containing paintings, artifacts, carvings, videos, tools, photographs of European enslavement forts, instruments, traveling exhibits.
The all new African American Military History Museum is located inside America’s only remaining, original African American USO Club. This landmark building contains more than 150 years of African American military history including hundreds of artifacts, photos and tributes to the history of African Americans who served this nation in the Armed Forces.
Alan Lomax was a folklorist and musicologist who spent his lifetime collecting and celebrating music and musicians around the world, recording their songs, making photographs and films. His work is interwoven with the Library of Congress and the Archive of American Folk Song. During the 1950s and again in the 1970s, attracted by the lure of north Mississippi’s unique Hill Country Blues, Lomax visited the Como area. Lomax’s repatriated recordings, photographs and film capture this unique regional Blues said to be the closest to its African roots. The collection may be viewed in the Public Library on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday between the hours of 10a.m.- 6p.m. or on Saturday from 10a.m.-noon.
The Alice Moseley Folk Art & Antique Museum is located on the 2nd floor of the Historic Train Depot. Alice Moseley was a nationally known folk artist who lived, painted, and welcomed visitors to the Little Blue House across the street from the Depot. The museum contains a collection of her original paintings as well as an extensive collection of her son’s, Tim Moseley, antique furniture, pottery, art glass, and bottles. Mrs. Moseley’s prints are available for purchase.
This museum is now housed in the town's first hospital, built in 1916. In 1976 it became Amory's bi-centennial project and was converted to a museum.
The Library’s Department of Archives and Manuscripts houses over 300 manuscript collections, the William Faulkner Collection (which includes his Nobel Prize), University archival collections, Mississippi state documents, and in the Mississippi Collections over 20,000 volumes of Mississippiana. Exhibits of interest to students and the general public are presented on the second floor in Archives and Special Collections.
This museum houses memorabilia from the Civil War, WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam and the Persian Gulf Wars. More than 6,100 items from all branches of the military are displayed. Free admission.