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Hmong Museum

Buildings and structures in Ramsey County, MinnesotaEthnic museums in MinnesotaHmong-American culture in MinnesotaMuseums in Saint Paul, MinnesotaUse American English from August 2025
Use mdy dates from March 2025
Hmong Museum logo
Hmong Museum logo

The Hmong Museum in Saint Paul, Minnesota is the first museum in the United States dedicated exclusively to preserving and educating about Hmong history, arts, and culture. Founded in 2015, the museum initially operated without a permanent physical space. It partnered with local cultural organizations to deliver intergenerational programs that engaged the community. In October 2023, the museum opened a gallery space where it hosts rotating exhibitions and offers a gift shop featuring artwork by Hmong artists.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hmong Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hmong Museum
Johnson Parkway, Saint Paul Dayton's Bluff

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N 44.971472 ° E -93.045089 °
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Hmong Village

Johnson Parkway 1001
55106 Saint Paul, Dayton's Bluff
Minnesota, United States
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Website
hmongvillageshoppingcenter.com

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Nearby Places

Bruce Vento Regional Trail
Bruce Vento Regional Trail

The Bruce Vento Regional Trail is a rail trail in the cities of Vadnais Heights, Gem Lake, Maplewood, and Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA. The trail occupies an abandoned Burlington Northern Railroad corridor and intersects with the Gateway State Trail in Maplewood and continues to just east of Lake Phalen in Saint Paul. South of the lake, it continues along Phalen Boulevard and through Swede Hollow to its terminus near Seventh Street. Another spur off of Phalen Boulevard continues west, going over a long bridge that crosses very active railroad tracks, and terminates at Interstate 35E. The trail is approximately seven miles (11 km) long from its northern end just north of Interstate 694 to the southern terminus near Seventh Street and Payne Avenue. The extension along Phalen Boulevard is 1.3 miles (2.1 km). Most of the trail was built in the late 1990s. The section along Phalen Boulevard was paved in late 2005. The trail leads through an abandoned rail corridor and is mostly off the road. In some places it goes through residential neighborhoods. There are some views of Lake Phalen through the trees. The section in Swede Hollow is particularly scenic where it runs through a ravine except for the presence of out-of-scale billboards. The south end of the trail features the Seventh Street Improvement Arches. This is a historic bridge built to carry the St. Paul and Duluth Railroad underneath Seventh Street. North beyond this are abandoned factories that belong to 3M. The Phalen Boulevard extension goes through more industrial and office areas, but at the top of the bridge over Westminster Junction, there is a historical exhibit with descriptions of how the railroads developed along with the city. The trail is named for U.S. Representative Bruce Vento. This former Burlington Northern Railroad corridor was formerly used by the Northern Pacific Railway and was originally built as the St. Paul and Duluth Railroad.