Explorer
Log in

Billet d'entrée au musée de la révolution américaine avec option audio-guidée

Aperçu
La Révolution américaine a été dramatique, graveleuse et pleine d'incertitude - une ère de bouleversements politiques et sociaux sans précédent, même selon les normes d'aujourd'hui. Les visiteurs du musée sont invités à explorer cette époque riche et compliquée et ses liens avec notre monde d'aujourd'hui. Situé à quelques pas de l'Independence Hall, le musée sert de portail vers les nombreux sites révolutionnaires de la région, suscitant l'intérêt, fournissant un contexte et encourageant l'exploration.

LES POINTS FORTS COMPRENNENT
- Admission de deux jours
- Film d'introduction, disponible en anglais et en mandarin, explorant le drame de la révolution américaine
- Des visites audio mettant en évidence les artefacts et les histoires clés de nos galeries sont disponibles en anglais et en espagnol. Sélectionnez cette option si vous souhaitez réserver une baguette désinfectée émise par le musée.
- Cartes et guides imprimés du musée disponibles en anglais, espagnol, français, allemand, mandarin et japonais.
- Boutique du musée proposant des cadeaux uniques, livres et reproductions d'artefacts.
Ville: crême Philadelphia
Thu 27 Feb
i
Vous pouvez déjà choisir la date sur le site de réservation
À partir de $24.00
Thu 27 Feb
À partir de $24.00
Faire une réservation
Ce qui est inclu
Skip-the-line Entry
Audio Guided Options available at checkout
Ticket valid for 2 Consecutive Days
All taxes, fees, and handling charges
Admission to the Museum of the American Revolution
Introductory film exploring the drama of the American Revolution
Special exhibitions when applicable
Itinéraire et carte
Point de rencontre
Ouvrir dans Google Maps
Philadelphie
101 S 3rd St
Les billets mobiles et les bons doivent être échangés au bureau d'admission au rez-de-chaussée du Musée de la Révolution américaine ou sur le podium situé près du grand escalier.

Les protocoles complets de santé et de sécurité sont disponibles sur https://www.amrevmuseum.org/at-the-museum/health-and-safety-at-the-museum
Point final
Cette activité se termine au point de rendez-vous.
Information additionnelle
  • Accessible aux fauteuils roulants
  • Les bébés et les jeunes enfants peuvent monter dans un landau ou une poussette
  • Animaux d'assistance autorisés
  • Des options de transport en commun sont disponibles à proximité
  • Les options de transport sont accessibles en fauteuil roulant
  • Toutes les zones et surfaces sont accessibles en fauteuil roulant
  • Convient à tous les niveaux de forme physique
  • Les enfants doivent être accompagnés de un adulte
  • Désinfectant pour les mains disponible pour les voyageurs et le personnel
  • Distanciation sociale imposée tout au long de l'expérience
  • Zones à fort trafic régulièrement désinfectées
  • Équipement/équipement désinfecté entre chaque utilisation
  • Guides nécessaires pour se laver régulièrement les mains
  • Politique de maintien à domicile payée pour le personnel présentant des symptômes
  • Les protocoles complets de santé et de sécurité peuvent être trouvés sur notre site Web.
À quoi s'attendre
1
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
2
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
3
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
4
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
5
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
6
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
7
Museum of the American Revolution
Follow George Washington’s remarkable journey and sit in the presence of his original Revolutionary War headquarters tent. Stand beneath the branches and lanterns of a life-size reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree. Read the list of grievances leveled the against the King from authentic printings of the Declaration of Independence. Stand among life-size replicas of members of the Oneida Indian Nation and listen to the intense debate that led to their decision to break with the Iroquois Confederacy and join the American cause. Experience the fear and frenzy of the front lines as you are confronted by an all-out British infantry charge at the Battle of Brandywine. Climb aboard a replica privateer ship to experience the war at sea. Learn about the wartime reality that faced many freed and enslaved African Americans and explore the contradictions between the fight for American liberty and the persistence of American slavery.
8
Musée de la révolution américaine
Suivez le remarquable voyage de George Washington et asseyez-vous en présence de sa tente originale du quartier général de la guerre d'indépendance. Tenez-vous sous les branches et les lanternes d'une reproduction grandeur nature du Boston Liberty Tree. Lisez la liste des griefs formulés contre le roi à partir d'impressions authentiques de la déclaration d'indépendance. Tenez-vous au milieu de répliques grandeur nature de membres de la nation indienne Oneida et écoutez le débat intense qui a conduit à leur décision de rompre avec la Confédération iroquoise et de rejoindre la cause américaine. Découvrez la peur et la frénésie des lignes de front alors que vous êtes confronté à une charge d'infanterie britannique totale lors de la bataille de Brandywine. Montez à bord d'une réplique de navire corsaire pour vivre la guerre en mer. Découvrez la réalité de la guerre à laquelle sont confrontés de nombreux Afro-Américains libérés et réduits en esclavage et explorez les contradictions entre la lutte pour la liberté américaine et la persistance de l'esclavage américain.
Show 5 plus d'arrêts
Politique d'annulation
Pour un remboursement complet, annulez au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de départ prévue.
Photos de voyageurs
Commentaires (131)
Ouvrir dans Google Maps
Diane_O
May 2021
I love this museum, quite a trip in History! The museum is laid out nicely, walk thru history. I hope to go back again, and this will be the first stop!
Mjd1969-mjd
May 2021
Excellent museum, not huge, but worth spending several hours exploring. A little reading heavy, but they had plenty of artifacts from the Revolution and the story was told in chronological order. I thought the displays were engaging. They were a nice mix of static displays and interactive screens. They laid the Revolution out in easy to understand ways. They addressed views from women and slaves at the time in a manner that made you think. There was much more to the Revolution than white guys giving speeches and fighting. The museum highlighted this. The only thing that surprised us was the ‘grand multimedia presentation’ called Washington’s tent. For some reason, we had expected some sort of introspective look at the decisions Washington made in the field that changed the course of the Revolution. A look behind the man. But the presentation was what was advertises. It was about Washington’s tent with a reveal of the tent at the end. Cool, but not what we expected.
KristiJ605
Apr 2021
I read about this museum shortly after it opened and couldn't wait to visit. I finally made it to Philly and was very excited to visit. I'm a museum professional. When I visit museums that have limited funds or aren't overflowing with visitors, I can ALWAYS pick out things about the museums that are interesting and well done. I'm very sad and surprised to report that neither me nor my college aged daughters found ANY redeeming qualities in this museum (which is shocking, because it appears they had talented people involved in the planning and they had good funding). I'll list some of the most obvious problems: 1.) ALOT of reading (overwhelming) and few artifacts. I love to read labels in museums. After about the 3rd room, my eyes were seriously glazing over (surprising, since Colonial and Revolutionary America are specialties of mine that I never grow tired of). It droned on and on, occasionally interrupted by something multimedia related (a bad movie, touch screen....nothing original or even interesting). The seemingly never ending writing was essentially a slightly modernized version of what my college peers and I called "US History by John D. Rockefeller." For those who don't know that history, in the late 19th century, as "philanthropy," Rockerfeller and other oligarchs bought up important historic sites in the US. The sites were refurbished and interpreted to the public with a sanitized version of American history where the few enslaved people were happy with being held in bondage, white women were all cheerful precursors to June Cleaver and poverty didn't exist. This is why so many Americans, when confronted with the truths about the founding of this country (that it was NOT Disney World) will scream that us stupid academics just want to "change history" Haha. Rockerfeller also influenced the history books many of these folks learned from in primary school. 2.) I was watching other visitors. Almost none of them were engaging with the exhibits....which is a shame. A major goal in professional museum circles is abandoning museums as temples (where the public just takes whatever is written as indisputable fact. Instead, museums can be a forum....inspiring people to critically think, share ideas and respectfully debate. This museum had so many opportunities to be a "forum," at a time in history where conspiracy theories and fairy tales have all but replaced critical thinking, learning together, and even questioning authorities and the versions of "history" they grew up with. 3.) The labels attached to the few artifacts on display were poorly written.....in so many ways I can't even begin to explain on here. But they all had 2 things in common.....expecting the visitor to unquestioningly accept the writer's interpretation and not sparking further conversation. Much of the writing and information is outdated....see the 2 photos I attached with the description of an elderly enslaved woman. I gasped, cringed, then took pics because I didn't think my colleagues would believe the description actually existed. 4.) If there were docents or staff interpreters, I didn't see them engaging visitors. In fact, I didn't see them at all. 5.) When we got to the end, where Washington's tents were supposed to be, the doors were shut, the area roped off, and a staff member said we had to wait 20-30 minutes to get inside. He said there was a movie and the tents were kept cordoned off because of the risk of damage due to light exposure. By that time, we had somewhere else to be, so I didn't get to experience that part. I can say, however, that MANY museums (including the National Archives where the Declaration and Constitution are kept and the Smithsonian American History museum that built a special low light room for the Star Spangled Banner) have done a decent job displaying delicate, light sensitive objects with success....and seeing these objects rarely requires a wait of more than a few minutes. Yes, the Declaration and Constitution are suffering from light damage. Still, considering what they've been through over the past 200 years+ and light sensitive technology didn't advance much until the 1900's, they're doing pretty good. I'd like to blame most of these issues on COVID19, but I can't. Most of the problems are just part of the museum itself. If any of the Board Members or Directors see this, I highly recommend a trip to Inverness, Scotland....to the museum near Culloden Battlefield, where the last Jacobite Uprising occurred in the 18th century. The subject material has similarities. But the Culloden Museum is probably the finest example I have ever seen of a museum of this caliber.

Événements connexes

Événements dans le même quartier

Nous pensons que votre langue est English
Dans quelle langue souhaitez-vous voir cette page ?
English English
Nous pensons que votre ville est La ville de New York
Dans quelle ville souhaitez-vous explorer ?
La ville de New York
New York City