• Behind the Scenes: Love and Lust

    Valentine’s Day is around the corner, and we’ve got you covered. This behind-the-scenes tour of our collection will highlight objects associated with love and romance. Some of these stories are romantic, and some are a little risqué – so adults only please!

  • Lunch and Learn: Prescribing from the Bookshelf: Bibliotherapy and the use of Books as Medicine

    Have you ever turned to a book for consolation? Treasured the escape of a novel? Found comfort in a poem, self-help book, or simply from reading the newspaper?

    Please join us for a virtual presentation by Historian Mary Mahoney on bibliotherapy, or the use of books as medicine. This talk will offer an exploration of the varied ways readers, doctors, and librarians have imagined books as medicine in the past.

  • Family Exhibit Tour: Dressing Up the Past

    Visit the CMCH for a special tour of Making Connecticut followed by a related craft! Through close-looking and hands-on activities, explore how clothing was made throughout history. Families will have the opportunity to card wool, “work” in a textile factory, and more!

  • A Paramedic’s Dispatches From the Front Line of the Opioid Epidemic

    In April 2021, Canning released Killing Season: A Paramedic’s Dispatches From the Front Line of the Opioid Epidemic. A paramedic on the streets of Hartford for over 25 years, Canning has seen the impact of prescription painkillers, heroin, and the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl firsthand.

  • Family Program: Tools of the Trade

    Uncover the stories of some Connecticut tradespeople and their tools! Kids will use historic tools to try out some popular trades from long ago and decorate their own toy toolbox to take home. Then, families can explore the exhibit Albert’s Odd Jobs: Making a Living in the 1800s to learn more about jobs throughout history.

  • Virtual Presentation: Black History at the CMCH

    This program offers a virtual tour of items from our collection representing a spectrum of the Black experience in CT. You’ll learn about a Harlem Renaissance writer, Ann Petry, who carefully preserved artifacts chronicling the black community of Saybrook. Examine daguerreotypes by Augustus Washington, who abandoned a successful Hartford photography business to build a new nation in Africa.

  • Family Program: Movie Under the ‘Stars’

    Curl up under the “stars” for a movie night at the CMCH! Enjoy a special showing of the movie Inside Out while snacking on free popcorn! Families are encouraged to bring pillows and blankets and wear their comfiest footy pajamas. Quiet toys and activities to enjoy during the movie will also be available.

  • Free First Saturday

    Free admission to the museum galleries all day. Please note that free admission does not include the Waterman Research Center.

  • Negra, negra, negra soy

    Kamora's Cultural Corner 75 Sterling St, Hartford, CT, United States

    Come witness as Black women share their words, stories, and creative talents to show the diversity of Blackness. Negra, negra, negra soy (“Black, Black, I am a Black woman”) is...

    Donation
  • Día de Muertos Free Community Celebration!

    Experience the sights and sounds of Día de Muertos, with all-ages arts activities, mariachi music, and Mexican folk dance! Disfrute de las imágenes y sonidos del Día de Muertos, con...

  • Date Night: Play the Bicycle Game!

    Connecticut Museum of Culture and History 1 Elizabeth Street, Hartford, CT, United States

    Getting bored with run-of-the-mill date nights? Sure, dinner and a movie is fine....but we've got something different.