NewseumIf you're a news junkie, this is the museum for you. The $450 million, seven-level Newseum is a monument to the members of the fourth estate and among the most interactive of Washington, D.C.'s museums. Among the 14 galleries, 15 theatres and two broadcast studios, you'll find the ash-covered notebook and camera of a reporter who died on 9/11; pieces of the Berlin Wall; iconic news photographs from the Vietnam War and civil rights era; and a memorial to journalists killed in the line of duty. Travel Information
Newseum Hours: Open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day. Admission: For adults (ages 19 to 64), admission is $20. For seniors (65 and older), military and students with valid ID, admission is $18. For youth (7 to 18), admission is $13. For children 6 and younger, admission is free. Parking: The Newseum does not provide visitor parking. Several commercial lots are available in the nearby Penn Quarter neighborhood. Metrorail: Yellow and Green Line stops for Archives/Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter, or Red Line stops for Judiciary Square or Gallery Place-Chinatown. Nearby AttractionsNational Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian) Suggested Tours
Among the museum's most popular features: eight "Be a Reporter" stations that allow visitors to step into the role of a broadcast journalist covering the White House or Supreme Court. Pick up a microphone and prepare for your on-camera debut. Videos can be downloaded later off the Newseum web site, for a $5 fee. As you leave the Newseum, check out the 80 daily front pages from newspapers around the world, strung out along Pennsylvania Avenue. With the newspaper industry in financial distress, they may soon be collector's items. Travel Tips
The Newseum's sixth-floor Hank Greenspun Terrace, named for a crusading publisher, offers stunning views of Pennsylvania Avenue, the National Mall, the U.S. Capitol and the Washington Monument. Bring your camera. To reserve tickets online in advance, click here. Find all the information you need about Washington, D.C. at http://www.thedistrict.com |
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