Mormon Trail Center at Historic Winter Quarters

The Mormon Trail Center at Historic Winter Quarters is a museum and visitors' center of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints situated in the Florence area of Omaha, Nebraska, United States. The museum analyzes the story of the Mormon Trail in addition to the history of a temporary Mormon settlement called Winter Quarters, which lay in the Florence area in between 1846-- 1848.

The museum lies on a bluff above and to the west of the Winter Quarters settlement site and is directly across the street from the historic Mormon Leader Cemetery and the Winter Quarters Nebraska Temple.
Early Visitors' Center

Prior to the building of the existing center, a little renovated house had actually worked as a visitors' center for travelers pertaining to see Florence and the Mormon Leader Cemetery. This center was closed on August 1, 1995 in preparation for the building and construction of the brand-new museum, and trailers served as a short-term center for visitors throughout the structure procedure.

Current Museum

The brand-new museum, constructed of red brick, has 11,000 square feet of display area and a large lower level. It opened at the end of 1996 with a sneak peek of partially completed exhibits and that year's gingerbread home screen.

The museum was committed by Church President Gordon B. Hinckley on April 18, 1997. The dedication was part of that year's sesquicentennial event of Brigham Young's Lead Company leaving Winter Quarters, travelling throughout the United States, and getting here in Mexico's Salt Lake Valley in 1847.

In 1998 a life-sized statue of a Mormon handcart family was placed on a round, concrete pedestal in front of the museum. The statue was developed by Latter-day Saint carver Franz M. Johansen.

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