Loading Events

Trick-or-Treat at the Market

Come Trick or Treat at the Market! Visit our vendors for treats, while supplies last. At the Sunday Farm Market in our North Parking Lot. No ticket needed. Sunday, October 27 11 am – 2 pm FREE Market Admission for Everyone! No registration necessary. MORE ABOUT OUR SUNDAY FARM MARKET

when

October 27, 2024 @ 11:00 am - 2:00 pm

where

151 Scofieldtown Rd
Stamford, CT United States

about

Come Trick or Treat at the Market! Visit our vendors for treats, while supplies last.
At the Sunday Farm Market in our North Parking Lot. No ticket needed.
Sunday, October 27
11 am – 2 pm
FREE Market Admission for Everyone! No registration necessary.
MORE ABOUT OUR SUNDAY FARM MARKET

join us:

American Mural Project Extends Its Family-Day Programming To Weekends throughout September

The American Mural Project (AMP) has extended its Family Day programming to weekends through September 29. Families can now participate in art activities any time during open hours. All art activities are included with admission. This month’s activities include Making Art with Fire: Fire Tiles and making Fire Prevention posters. Fourth and fifth graders can enter their posters in the statewide CT Fire Prevention Poster Recognition Program.  For more information: https://www.americanmuralproject.org/family-days

American Mural Project

Holiday Shopping Event

Find unique holiday gifts at the Museum Shop! Enjoy special deals and discounts during this ten day event. Local goods, custom Waterbury merch, creative gifts for kids, and more! ¡Compre regalos navideños únicos en la tienda del museo! Encuentre rebajas y descuentos especiales durante este evento de diez días. ¡Productos locales, productos personalizados de Waterbury, regalos creativos para niños y más! Visit our “Giving Tree” in the lobby! Visitors can select an ornament from the tree- each representing a specific…

Mattatuck Museum

Scouts Dino Day

On view in Dinosaur Discoveries: Ancient Fossils, New Ideas: T. rex BiomechanicsT. rex is often depicted with its great legs in a crouch—but was that its typical pose? Some biomechanical scientists doubt it. This model, shown mid-stride in this scale model, may have been rather straight-legged, too. An accompanying video shows how biomechanics experts think a creature the size of T. rex might have gotten around, and a how this great carnivore was likely much slower than any Hollywood T.…

Bendel Mansion

follow us: