Last updated: November 29, 2024
Place
Patrick J Mogan Cultural Center
Accessible Rooms, Assistive Listening Systems, Automated Entrance, Automated External Defibrillator (AED), Benches/Seating, Captioned Media, Cellular Signal, Elevator, Fire Extinguisher, First Aid Kit Available, Historical/Interpretive Information/Exhibits, Information, Information - Maps Available, Information - Ranger/Staff Member Present, Information Kiosk/Bulletin Board, Junior Ranger Activity, Restroom, Restroom - Accessible, Tactile Exhibit, Toilet - Flush, Trash/Litter Receptacles, Water - Drinking/Potable, Wheelchair Accessible, Wheelchairs Available
Hours of Operation
November 30, 2024 - Spring 2025
Open Daily
1:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Museum Exhibits
Into an 1840s Boarding House Exhibit
Explore a recreated boarding house (ca. 1841) and learn more about the lives of the early mill girls outside the factory walls. The first floor features a recreation of a boarding house dining room and kitchen. These bustling spaces were staffed by a boarding house keeper, whose room is adjacent. In this self-guided space, learn what early factory workers would eat on a daily basis and how the keeper prepared three meals daily.
Continue upstairs to the girls' crowded bedrooms and listen in on their nighttime conversations. Check out the exhibit cases to see how they spent their precious free time and what they wrote home to their families about life in Lowell. Visitors may also learn more in-depth information about select mill workers, including the poet Lucy Larcom and the suffragist Harriet Hanson Robinson.
One City, Many Cultures is available in English and Spanish with more languages to be available in the future.
More information about the planning and installation process can be found on the One City, Many Cultures page.
Angkor Dance Troupe
Jim Higgins
Angkor Dance Troupe
Established in 1986 when Tim Thou and a passionate group of Cambodian refugees came together in Lowell, Massachusetts with the sole purpose to revive a culture once almost lost, Angkor Dance Troupe (ADT) teaches and performs a body of work developed at the Royal University of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh, Cambodia - where they are considered the world’s cultural source and standard bearer for traditional Cambodian arts. Through cultural exchanges and programs including dance, music, and Khmer Language class, students learn how to explain the history and stories of the Cambodian people through the power of facial/body language, musical composition, and lyrical speech. The Mogan Cultural Center serves as the rehearsal area for the Angkor Dance Troupe. To learn more about the ADT, visit the Angkor Dance Troupe website.
Parking
The Mogan Cultural Center is a 10-15 minute walk from the Visitor Center (246 Market Street) and the Hamilton Canal Innovation District parking garage (350 Dutton Street). Parking in this garage (only) is available to National Park visitors at no cost provided they obtain a valid parking voucher at either the Visitor Center or at the Boott Cotton Mills Museum.If you would like to park closer to the museum, parking is available for a fee at city garages or on metered street parking. The closest city parking garage to the Mogan Cultural Center is the Downes Parking Garage located at 75 John Street. Parking fees apply.
Disability designated parking spaces are provided in the city parking garage at 75 John Street. The garage has a height limitation of 6' 8" for vehicles. Vehicles that display disability license plates or a hanging placard may also park at no cost in any designated parking space within the City of Lowell.