The United States of America turns 250 years old on July 4, 2026.
Museums across the United States are marking the important milestone not just with patriotic displays but also with exhibitions and programs that go beyond simple celebration to explore our nation’s full, complex story. The efforts of these top museums frame the semiquincentennial not just as a commemoration of the past but also as an opportunity to examine the present and imagine the country’s future.
Smithsonian Institution
Launching a system-wide initiative called “Our Shared Future: 250,” the Smithsonian Institution is focusing on a big-picture national story while questioning what the next 250 years should look like. Its flagship exhibition, “In Pursuit of Life, Liberty, & Happiness,” is built around 250 artifacts from U.S. history. New and updated exhibits across multiple museums include a refreshed Declaration of Independence diorama and a photography exhibit reflecting America’s past and present.The National Gallery of Art
Located on the National Mall in Washington, this museum is featuring a major exhibition, “Dear America: Artists Explore the American Experience,” with an angle of America through the eyes of its artists, past and present, including uncomfortable truths Americans need to know.New funding has allowed artwork to be sent across the country via an “Across the Nation” program that uses art to reinterpret U.S. identity with critical and diverse perspectives.

National Constitution Center
The National Constitution Center in Philadelphia is examining the messy, argumentative side behind the nation’s founding, showcasing rare artifacts such as early Constitution printings and interactive galleries exploring debates, protests, and conflicts behind our battle for independence.The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City is taking a multi-layered, arts-focused approach to America’s 250th—less about a single blockbuster show and more about weaving the anniversary throughout the museum.A centerpiece of the celebration is an exhibition called “Revolution,” which runs through August, featuring objects from across the Met’s vast collection. It includes founding fathers such as George Washington and Benjamin Franklin along with indigenous leaders, enslaved and free Black voices, and colonial perspectives.
American Revolution Museum at Yorktown
As the nation marks its 250th anniversary, the American Revolutionary Museum at Yorktown offers an immersive look at America’s founding, bringing the Revolution to life through personal stories, rare artifacts, films, and interactive exhibits tracing the path from colonial unrest to independence.Visitors can step into the 18th century through outdoor living history, muster with troops in a re-created Continental Army encampment, watch military drills, and explore daily life on a Revolution-era farm. Hands-on demonstrations from living-history interpreters add depth and context to the experience.
- Fresh Views of the American Revolution: Oct. 18, 2025–Aug. 31, 2026
- Civically Yours Escape Room Family Day: June 27, 2026
- Liberty Celebration: July 4, 2026
- Yorktown Victory Celebration: Oct. 17–18, 2026
Norman Rockwell Museum
Located in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, in the picturesque Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts, the museum is closely tied to Rockwell himself, who lived and worked there for the last 25 years of his life.National Archives
The National Archives Museum in Washington is taking on one of the most ambitious and most dramatic projects tied to America’s 250th. Instead of visitors coming to our nation’s capital, the “Freedom Plane” tour will take some of the country’s most important founding documents out of Washington and directly to people across the country, which almost never happens.- A rare 1823 engraving of the Declaration of Independence
- The Treaty of Paris (1783), which ended the Revolutionary War
- Early drafts of the U.S. Constitution
- Oaths of allegiance signed by figures such as George Washington
- Records showing how delegates voted on the Constitution
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art
A newer but major player in the U.S. museum realm, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is a nonprofit art museum in Bentonville, Arkansas, that celebrates the American spirit through art and nature. Founded by philanthropist Alice Walton and designed by architect Moshe Safdie, it has become a cultural landmark for its distinctive architecture, world-class collection, and free public access.Through July 27, 2026, the museum will feature “America 250: Common Threads,” covering 250 years of American art and history, from the Revolutionary era to today, along with historic documents (including an early engraving of the Declaration of Independence), paintings, textiles, quilts, photographs, and everyday objects. The exhibition sports a heavy emphasis on participation with hands-on crafts and interactive experiences, making the 250th feel interactive and community-driven, not just educational.







