Last week it was Nicodemus; this week it’s Colby, Kansas, right where Highway 24 runs into I-70. I went there for one reason: The Prairie Museum of Art and History, which I’d last visited in the spring 2007. It hadn’t changed much. The museum building, seen here from the back, is a dugout,

Kansas photos, Beth Partin's photos, tiny museumsbut many exhibits await outside, including a few live ones.Kansas photos, Beth Partin's photos, tiny museumsBuildings from western Kansas dot the site. Volunteers built this sod house in 1984, but it contains furnishings from the late nineteenth century. Kansas photos, sod house, Beth Partin's photos, tiny museumsOn my 2007 trip through Kansas down to the Gulf Coast of Texas, I photographed the interior of the schoolroom. I think I may have sat at a desk like that in grade school. Beth Partin's photos, Colby museums, tiny museums, Kansas photosMy main destination was the Cooper Barn, the largest barn in Kansas and one of the Eight Wonders of Kansas Architecture.Kansas museums, Kansas photos, Beth Partin's photos, tiny museums
Inside it exhibits old cars, farm equipment, and lots and lots of cobwebs and dust. Upstairs is a room large enough to use for dances. I really enjoy wandering around historical museums like this one. I wish I’d arrived earlier in the day, but I wouldn’t have missed Nicodemus for the world. When I walked back into the museum, they had turned off the lights. I begged the staff to turn them back on so I could photograph Nellie Kuska’s collection of Barbies of color. Barbies of color, Nellie Kuska, Beth Partin's photos, Kansas museums, tiny museumsNot the first thing you’d expect to see in Kansas, is it? And it’s only a small part of her doll collection, which is only a small part of her entire collection. That’s why tiny museums are worth a look—you’ll always find some odd detail that changes your view of the place.

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  1. Cara Lopez Lee October 25, 2010 at 2:31 pm - Reply

    Very fun post, Beth. I love the non sequitur Barbie collection. My mother lives in Kansas and owns a Barbie collection, including many Barbies of color. They’re all still in their original boxes. I suspect that she looks at it as an investment to pass down to me. If so, I see Ebay in their future. Or perhaps… a Kansas museum.

  2. Beth October 25, 2010 at 2:45 pm - Reply

    Or perhaps my niece, who is director of marketing for Barbie. I just sent her the Space Barbie I got at the space shuttle launch in February.

  3. Cara Lopez Lee October 25, 2010 at 3:40 pm - Reply

    Space Barbie?! That I’d like to see, a Barbie with a cool career. Try these on for size: Firefighter Barbie, Reporter Barbie, Doctor Barbie, and of course, President Barbie. But before she becomes President Barbie, I say her still-ridiculous measurements need to become yet more realistic.

  4. […] last left you after a whirlwind tour through the Prairie Museum of Art and History in Colby. When I was done photographing Barbies, and they had turned off the lights again, I asked […]

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