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clement hotel railroad museum

clement hotel railroad museum

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  • bonniep320
    tour was great, museum was very well done up and the story get us interested. Meals around the area restaurants are well prepared and price was ok.
  • granpeggy2004
    If you like history at all, this is your place. If you know some about Dickson County and want to learn more, this is the place for you. We had a business engagment and were limited for time, but we got a good idea of what is there, but I would love to go back and spend more time. The entire staff was great.
  • 414SteveS414
    I have lived here many years and never been here. I went there for a wedding and reception and was amazed at what a treasure of history this place holds. The staff is amazing with info and I am going back with my family to really spend quality time exploring. If you can take at least 2 hours out of your day and visit this wonderful jewel, you will walk away amazed how it felt like it was only 30 minutes.
  • cynthiam892
    The people there were so nice! The tour guide named Nancy was so great and was well informed. I would highly recommend it to anyone.
  • crimsontidefans
    I love history, I really do but I found this tour to be a little boring. The hotel was nice. It seems like they have maintained it well. I did like seeing the book that people signed in on. You could imagine these men who worked on the railroad coming in after long days to get a good nights rest. I don't know, a lot of other people thought this was a fantastic tour. I would just say give it a try for yourself. Maybe will you get something out of this that I didn't?
  • LinnR589
    This is a really neat place. Great tour guide that tells you everything. the modle train is super. Bring the kids and show them what it was like years ago
  • dengib
    It's always nice when history is presented in a building with some history of its own as this place does. That and the extremely friendly staff add to a wide range of well done displays on the history of Dickson and the surrounding area.
  • WilliamNichols
    Did not expect to find a railroad museum in Dickson, Tennessee. Very nice museum. Very much in keeping with the general atmosphere of Dickson. Everyone is extremely nice, yet sincere in their efforts to help you have a wonderful time. Dickson is much more than overnight stop along the way. Wife and I plan to vacation there in the future due to how welcome we were made to feel.
  • MichellesWanderlust
    Our family of 4, ages 12 to 45, enjoyed our tour at the museum. We were amazed at how well everything was maintained. So much to see ad the tickets are very reasonable. Kids are free and adults are $4(I think). Upstairs has a large room devoted to miniature trains and villages. You can tell the staff love their jobs. There were helpful and cheerful. The location is super convenient as you can park fro free and walk to a few restaurants and several shops.
  • confuzioncity
    Definitely a great tour. Lots of local history. Be prepared to spend a few hours exploring this place.
  • cryzw
    This museum is only a short distance off Interstate 40, and well worth a visit! The building itself was once a hotel, and now houses room after room of fascinating exhibits - bound to hold the interest of young and old, alike. The staff is wonderful - everyone who works here demonstrates true Southern hospitality. This museum is reasonably priced, educational and entertaining.
  • spasterski
    This museum was worth our stop and an hour of our time. Being from out of state, we learned a lot about the area through this tour, as well as the history of the building. Very intricate train room set up upstairs. Take the time to look closely at all the detail or you'll miss so many cute things in the exhibit.
  • hardshell911
    Went there once and was fascinated, I plan on going back and spending a lot more time.
  • DyersburgTraveler
    This museum was a big pleasant surprise. The outside doesn't give a fancy apperance, for this was a early 1900's railroad hotel, and not a modern-day resort. The name of it was Hotel Halbrook, but the birth of a Tennessee governor here gave it is current museum title of Clement Hotel Railroad Museum.Inside you will find several rooms dedicated to both the history of the area, and the restored interior apperance of the hotel itself. You start in the lobby and work your way through rooms talking about Dickson's railroad history (it was a water stop for steam engines during the Civil War). There are touch-screen displays here for you to use. Also, there is the history of iron ore production in large furnaces that use to dot the county's landscape. Chunks of the iron ore used can be picked up and held. And then onto Tennessee Gov. Frank Clement. He was a popular governor who was literally born in the back room of this hotel. On the second floor, you'll see more about Clement, including his governor's desk, and here, too, is where you will find the large HO-scale train. Finely detailed, it is a sight to see. Get one of the staff running it to point out how they are building it. The club here has around $50,000 in the layout, and about 9,000 work hours. It's work that is still going on. A stop will take less than an hour to see the museum, and it will probably entertain your kids. It's located on the south side of the main railline through Dickson, across from the depot. Signs to the museum are small. The hotel is located west of Tenn. 46, and south of downtown Dickson, on Business U.S. 70. Neat place, inexpensive and worth a stop.
  • rangercatfish
    Rolling east or west on I-40 about a 1/2 hour west of Nashville, when you get to Dickson, Tennessee, you'll see the brown interstate history signs for the "Clement Hotel Railroad Museum". If you have a few hours to spend, do your self a favor, and take the exit, and head for beautiful downtown Dickson. I got there about dinnertime (noon in the South), and ate at the Ace Diner (see review) before taking in the museum. I happened in while Derrick Webster, Operations Coordinator, and Tina Littleton, the Museum Coordinator, were working with Wanda Pendergrass, a docent. I was warmly greeted, and quickly became immersed in the most interesting history of the Clement Hotel Railroad Museum in particular, and the history of Dickson County, Tennessee in general. I found the juxtaposition of the political, cultural, and mechanical (or industrial) history found in this museum to be fascinating, and well worth the visit and time. Without giving everything away, note that the hotel building has a history, the railroad has a history, and the name Clement comes from the fact that a three term Governor of Tennesse was born in the building. You can stand in the very room where history was born. The name Clement probably doesn't mean much to a visitor that's not from Tennessee, but Governor Clement (the youngest Governor in modern history) made very significant contributions to the history of both his State, and his Nation, for which all Americans should be proud. After visiting with Derrick, and Tina, Ms. Wanda gave me a tour, which kinda whetted my appetite to learn more about the entire town, and County. She did an admirable job of weaving together the threads of history and culture which comprise the museum exhibits. Did you know that the cannonballs used by Andy Jackson at New Orleans were cast in Dickson County? Me, neither. And for you railroad buffs, the Dickson Model Railroad Club has a terrific model railroad exhibit on the second floor that had three trains running simultaneously when I was there. It's a fine exhibit, and worth lingering, so you can talk to the "Engineer" on duty. After my all too short two hour visit, I regretted that prior plans prevented an overnight stay, and I thought that Dickson County would make a worthwhile vacation stopover for "out of staters". It should certainly be on the list of all Tennesseans (particularly Nashville) as a terrific weekend getaway spot. I would love to see the Droulliard Mansion in Cumberland Furnace, Montgomery Bell State Park, and I did journey over the hill and around the bend to see the Dickson County Courthouse, built in 1803, and the oldest continuously operating courthouse in Tennessee (and second oldest in the US, I think). Got my picture took sitting in the judge's chair. (Don't tell the Judge).All in all, a museum worthy of inclusion on your Tennessee itinerary, a friendly southern town, (full of friendly Southrons), and a great place to have a getaway weekend. If you go, tell'em Catfish sentcha, and have a great time.
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