The Columbus Dispatch

Quirky museum and park offer exhibits for every interest

- By Steve Stephens |

UNION CITY, Tenn. — For travelers who aren’t expecting it, a first look at the Discovery Center can be a bit disconcert­ing.

The massive, 100,000-squarefoot museum brings to mind a giant sea monster surfacing among the cornfields of northweste­rn Tennessee, except it’s filled with fascinatin­g exhibits instead of unfortunat­e mariners. And the center is just one piece of the

50-acre Discovery Park of America.

The park’s amazing, and huge, assemblage of science, history, natural history and cultural displays makes it a destinatio­n for visitors from around the country, and a must-see for any families venturing near

Union City.

A private family foundation contribute­d $80 million to establish Discovery Park in 2013 and continues to support its operation. The park is like 10 museums rolled into one. But what it lacks in focus it makes up for in breadth, containing something of interest for, surely, every visitor.

The first thing guests encounter when entering the Discover Center building is a giant, snarling (stuffed) bear, which sets the cool, quirky tone found throughout the site.

Things only get bigger in the Natural History Gallery and Dinosaur Hall, where skeletons of three-storyhigh ancient creatures await.

Among the other indoor galleries are those devoted to American Indians, regional history, military history, nature, energy and transporta­tion.

One of my favorite exhibits was the room-sized Earthquake Simulator, a high-tech re-creation of the enormous New Madrid quakes of 1811 and 1812 that changed the flow of the Mississipp­i River and created nearby Reelfoot Lake. The panoramic, wraparound video screen, moving floor and water mister make the experience very realistic.

Younger explorers, especially, will enjoy another high-tech exhibit, Starship Theater, which simulates a journey through space. “Passengers” help choose destinatio­ns and solve problems using keypads at their theater seats.

I appreciate­d the Oral History Theater, where visitors could sit in rocking chairs on a simulated front porch and watch short video interviews of older local residents recounting their personal experience­s with racial segregatio­n and discrimina­tion.

I was also impressed by the large interactiv­e globe in the Science, Space and Technology Gallery that could be programed to display any planet in the solar system.

And the exhibits and topics go on and on.

Is there a large antique-car exhibit? There is.

How about a room devoted to ancient torture devices? But of course.

A holographi­c Indian camp fire? Check.

A full-size rendering of the Arc of the Covenant? You know it.

Outside the Discovery Center building, visitors will find a plethora of additional exhibits and displays, including a re-creation of an early Tennessee town that features authentic historic buildings and some reproducti­ons.

Across pretty North Lake is VISITING

Discovery Park of America is open Tuesday through Sunday. Single-day admission is $14.95 for adults and $11.95 for children ages 4-11. Discounted admission is available for seniors and members of AAA, AARP and the military services. Additional charges apply for a few exhibits, such as the Earthquake Simulator.

For more informatio­n, call 731885-5455 or visit discovery parkofamer­ica.com.

For informatio­n about more things to see and do and places to stay in and near Union City, call the Obion County Chamber of Commerce at 731-885-0211 or visit www.obioncount­y.org. Mill Ridge, with a historic school house, a picturesqu­e mill and feed store, and an exhibit hall filled with beautifull­y restored antique tractors.

Three beautiful garden areas are also located near the lake: the Children’s Discovery Garden and play area; the magnificen­tly landscaped, formal European Garden; and the pretty and peaceful Japanese Garden.

After a half day of exploratio­n, I thought I’d glimpsed, at least, everything the park had to offer.

Not so.

The Discovery Center’s observatio­n tower, 200 feet above the surroundin­g flatlands, offered a magnificen­t view of the area, including an entire section of the park that I had completely overlooked to that point.

So back outside I went, following the park’s burbling stream across a pretty covered bridge to a historic church, train depot and some beautiful vintage passenger train cars.

Then a stroll along South Lake brought me to Freedom Square, with an old-timey drug store, firehouse, barber shop and a “Liberty Hall” containing displays on Tennessee and American history.

Around Liberty Hall are full-sized, heroic-looking statues of Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Prometheus, Ronald Reagan and Ayn Rand — because of course there are.

I’ll withhold further editorial comment — except to note that I was impressed by Discovery Park’s profession­al, informativ­e and wide-ranging exhibits, but also charmed by its uniquely quirky personalit­y.

 ??  ?? Visitors exit the Earthquake Simulator near a mastodon at Discovery Center.
Visitors exit the Earthquake Simulator near a mastodon at Discovery Center.
 ?? [STEVE STEPHENS/DISPATCH PHOTOS] ?? The Settlement features authentic and re-created 19th-century buildings in Discovery Park of America.
[STEVE STEPHENS/DISPATCH PHOTOS] The Settlement features authentic and re-created 19th-century buildings in Discovery Park of America.
 ??  ?? A programmab­le, 3-D globe allows visitors to see all the planets of the Solar System at the museum in Union City, Tenn.
A programmab­le, 3-D globe allows visitors to see all the planets of the Solar System at the museum in Union City, Tenn.
 ??  ?? A giant bear greets visitors to Discovery Center, the centerpiec­e of Discovery Park.
A giant bear greets visitors to Discovery Center, the centerpiec­e of Discovery Park.

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