Our History
Purpose
Landis Valley Village & Farm Museum is a nationally significant living history museum that collects, conserves, exhibits and interprets Pennsylvania German material culture and heritage between 1750-1940. This is accomplished through preservation and interpretation of the largest collection of Pennsylvania German artifacts in the country and through the presentation of authentic traditional farming, village and industrial life, skilled craft demonstrations, and historical animals and plants. The museum promotes education, research, programs, and events for the benefit and enjoyment of its visitors and the community.
What is the Landis Valley Village & Farm Museum?
A visit to Landis Valley Village & Farm Museum, the largest Pennsylvania German museum in the country, provides the visitor with a wonderful overview of two brothers’ passion for collecting “things of the past.” In 1925, George and Henry Landis (at right) opened a Barn Museum – filled with thousands of everyday farm and household objects of their 18th and 19th century Pennsylvania German heritage. With the rapid advancement of 20th-century technology in all walks of life, these two brothers sought to preserve not only the tools and farm equipment of yesteryear, but a way of life. George and Henry Landis were proud of their Pennsylvania German heritage and culture and did not want to see it disappear. In 1939, they expanded their crowded museum to serve their ever-growing collection. In 1941 the brothers received much needed financial assistance from the Oberlander Trust, which formerly incorporated the museum. The Trust’s monetary help led to the construction of an early 19th-century Tavern which served as the earliest visitor center and library. Soon afterward, a gunshop and two sheds were included behind the tavern to form a courtyard which housed the brothers’ growing collection. In 1953, their financial resources dwindling, George and Henry arranged for their museum to be administered and supported by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC), an agency of state government.
Over the next 45 years, the state began purchasing and building structures which are now part of the historic village. The property includes an 1856 hotel and two brick buildings built between 1815 and 1840. Also, two log buildings, an 1890’s schoolhouse and an old blacksmith shop were purchased and moved to the site. The museum constructed a firehouse, a 19th-century Swiss bank barn, an 18th-century log home with a bakehouse and smokehouse, a pigsty and spring house to add to the general interpretation of the museum. In 1970, a new visitor center and the textile building were added and, in 1999, the state-of-the-art Collections Gallery completed the museum’s existing layout.
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