Credit to Olson Photographic for the beautiful photos above.
When you visit our Learning Center, you will discover special touches in all corners of the building.
Upon entering, you will immediately be connected to a historic barn, as you encounter majestic hand-hewn beams that once supported a dairy barn at Milk Can Corners Farm in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania. The original barn was built in the 1700s, so these massive timbers were carved from trees growing in the virgin forests of the 1600s. Historic wood from a grain silo was recycled to create the flooring and wainscoting in many areas of the building.
The beauty continues as you climb the winding staircase and enter the barn-like Gathering Place on the upper level, with its soaring cupola, antique wood, and gracious windows that frame views of woodlands and pastures, focusing your attention on the beauty of nature. The Gathering Place is home to our extensive collection of authentic and “living” artifacts from Native American tribes. You will discover fine examples, including 3,000-year-old hammerstones, anchor weights, projectile points, recreated decoys, period pottery, and tools from Eastern Woodland Indians. There are also wonderful representations from New York’s Iroquois tribes and Plains Indians.
After passing photos and memorabilia of Carmen Mathews, and stepping out on the wraparound porch, you will experience “Carmen’s Vista” before you enter the beautiful and welcoming Common Room. This side of the building has a gracious living room with a fireplace, a kitchen, four spacious bunk rooms, and restrooms. This is another space for our lectures and programs.
On the lower level, you will find our main office, a classroom (home of our observation hive during the warm weather), our wildlife room, which houses a variety of fascinating reptiles and amphibians used in our programs, and two beautiful hand-sculpted tile walls displaying themes of our programs and local wildlife.