Ephraim Historical Foundation
& Ephraim Village Museums

Summer Museum Hours: 11:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday, June 21-September 1, 2012.
Fall Museum Hours: 11:00am-4:00pm, Fridays and Saturdays, Labor Day through Columbus Day weekend.
Join us for our 18th Annual Sunday Night Sing-Alongs, the History Speaks lecture series and children’s programs.
New in 2012: Ephraim’s Moravian Heritage Tram Tour – Departing Tuesdays at 1:30pm from Anderson Barn History
Center, 6/19/12-8/28/12. This special tram tour will include the Historic Iverson House, Ephraim’s Moravian
Church and the Moravian Cemetery. Length: 1 hour 45 minutes. Fee: $10 per adult, $5 per student and children
five and under are free.
Also new in 2012: Antiques & Collectibles Appraisal Event – Featuring author and antiques expert Mark Moran,
Saturday, June 30, 1:00pm-4:00pm at the Ephraim Village Hall. Mr. Moran is author or co-author of more than 25
books on antiques and collectibles, including the 800-page annual Warman’s Antiques & Collectibles, now in its
45th edition. Pre-registration is required. Please contact the Ephraim Historical Foundation at 920-854-9688.
Historic Walking Tours depart from Anderson Barn History Center at 10:30am, Tuesday-Friday. The walking tours
are 1.5 miles long and are included in the price of admission to Ephraim Village Museums.
Historic Tram Tours depart from Anderson Barn History Center at 11:00am, Tuesday-Saturday. This tour is 1 hour
15 minutes. Admission to Ephraim Village Museums is included with the purchase of a tram tour ticket. Fees for
the public: $8 per adult, $5 per student (ages 6-11) and children five and under are free. (Foundation members
receive 50% discount on Tram Tour tickets).
Weekly Ephraim Moravian Church/Historic Iverson House Tour: For an in-depth experience of Moravian heritage, the
tour starts at the church each Thursday, 1:30pm, from June 21-August 30, 2012. Admission is $5 per adult, $2.50
per student (ages 6-11) and children five and under are free. Tickets are sold prior to the tour at the church
or at Anderson Barn History Center, 3060 Anderson Lane.




