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The Museum of Us is a cultural anthropology museum with immersive experiences about the human experience.
Learn more about admission, daily operating hours, and more at the Museum of Us.
Learn more about the Museum's History of Cultural Resources & Exhibits. Exhibits at the Museum of Us encourage visitors to challenge their assumptions, share their perspectives, and experience what it means to be human in immersive and interactive ways.
The Museum’s inaugural exhibit in 1915, “The Story of Man Through the Ages,” amplified the dominant Western narrative of the time – that race was biological and that societies had a hierarchical “fitness for survival” based on race.
Join us for a uniquely-San Diego experience! The California Tower is one of our city's most iconic historic landmarks. Make the climb on a guided tour that highlights the origins of Balboa Park and the histories of some of the many diverse communities that call the region home. All tours culminate in breathtaking 360-degree views of San Diego ...
After operating as the San Diego Museum of Man for over 40 years, on August 2nd, 2020, the Museum stepped into a new identity that better reflects our work towards equity, inclusion, and decolonization. Evolve with “Us” on a trip through time in our installation Becoming “Us”.
The Museum of Us is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization. Our team is made up of thinkers, builders, innovators, artists, activists, and more from a diversity of backgrounds.
Membership On Us includes: Unlimited, free admission for one whole year after your first visit. Access to $10 California Tower Tours. Opportunities to get involved, program and event invitations, Museum news, and much more! Tickets.
For over 100 years, the Museum of Us has been responsible for the stewardship of hundreds of thousands of cultural resources originating from across the globe. Currently, we hold over 75,000 ethnographic items; 100,000 images and 300 linear feet of archival materials; 300,000 archeological items; and over 7,500 ancestral human remains.
In this thoughtful (and gore-free!), one-of-a-kind exhibit, you’ll learn that cannibals aren’t who you think they are. They span cultures and circumstances – from European kings and queens, American and European sailors, and American colonists, to accident survivors, the sick, and more.