Search results
May 1, 2024 · Goessel, KS, is 11 miles north of Hwy K-15/I-135 interchange (Exit 34) at North Newton, KS. See Google map on Contact Page. The Mennonite Heritage and Agricultural Museum located in Goessel Ks. tells the story and preserves the history of the German Mennonite Russian emigrants.
- Contact
Map, hours and contact information for Mennonite Heritage...
- Our Story
Mennonite Heritage and Agricultural Museum . 200 N. Poplar,...
- Heritage Newsletter
Heritage Newsletter - Mennonite Heritage & Agricultural...
- History of Goessel Mennonites
This book is for sale at the Mennonite Heritage and...
- Early Life on the Prairie
Early Life on the Prairie - Mennonite Heritage &...
- What is Faspa
Goessel, KS 67053 620-367-8200. Museum Hours. Let's take a...
- What is a Zwieback
2014-2024 Mennonite Heritage . and Agricultural Museum....
- Food-Ethnic Favorites
2014-2024 Mennonite Heritage . and Agricultural Museum....
- Memories of . . . pg. 1
Memories of . . . pg. 1 - Mennonite Heritage & Agricultural...
- Other Memories . . . pg. 3
Memories of Weddings, Funerals and Zwieback in the Mennonite...
- Contact
Mennonite Heritage and Agricultural Museum, Goessel, Kansas. 1,616 likes · 82 talking about this · 208 were here. An eight building museum complex recreating the story of Mennonite immigrants who...
- (19)
- 616
- 1872
Open by only by appointment in winter. The Mennonite Heritage and Agricultural Museum in Goessel, Kansas is part of a museum complex of 8 buildings established to preserve the artifacts from early Mennonite households, farms, schools, churches and Bethesda Mennonite hospital.
Eight buildings in a village-like setting tell the story of Mennonites who immigrated to the Goessel area in 1874 from the Ukraine area of Russia. They brought Turkey-Red Hard Winter Wheat and agricultural practices with them to help turn Kansas into the breadbasket of the world.
- 200 N Poplar, Goessel, 67053, KS
- (620) 367-8200
Jul 7, 2016 · This museum tells the story of Goessel: a town that migrated, pretty much intact, through Europe and Ukraine and then to Kansas in 1874. It is not the story of wealthy barons or presidents, but of ordinary people and the celebrations and hardships they faced.