Museum Discoveries
The center aisle of the Cattle Barn, the barn where the milking parlor for Doc Remick’s dairy business was located.
Get to Know the Museum
Remick is located in historic Tamworth Village, where father-and-son country doctors, Dr. Edwin Remick and Dr. Edwin “Doc” Crafts Remick, lived and practiced medicine for a combined 99 years.
The museum encompasses the Remick farmstead — a nearly 100-acre property with two homes, three barns, a sugarhouse, outbuildings, pastures and a walking trail.
Exhibits in the museum’s two homes — the Edwin C. Remick House (the Museum Center) and the Captain Enoch Remick House (on the National Register of Historic Places), as well as the buildings and barns themselves, provide glimpses into the contributions of Tamworth’s country doctors and the agricultural way of life in New Hampshire.
The first floor of the Museum Center is where visitors can gain a historical overview of the Remick property and those who lived here. Current exhibits include: The History of Remick Farm ~ Family & Farm, A Glimpse of a Country Doctor’s Medical Practice, and Tourism in Tamworth. On the second floor, tour the modest, mid-century-era apartment of Doc and Marion Remick (accessible by stairway only).
From late spring to early fall, exhibits in the Captain Enoch Remick House are viewable during Remick Country Doctor Medical History Tours. The tour takes place in the medical rooms used by both Drs. Remick from 1894–1993.
There’s also an entire farmstead for you to explore. Self-guided visits provide the opportunity to visit the museum farmstead grounds at your leisure. During the summer season you will encounter additional self-guided activities that encourage you to learn about the historic farmstead, as well as provide interactive information about nature- and science-based occurrences related to it.
Barns & Buildings
The Remick farmstead, established over 200 years ago, comprises a cattle barn, a historic English barn, a stable, a milk house (part of Doc Remick’s Hillsdale Dairy business and the first milk pasteurization plant north of Rochester, NH — operating from 1934 to 1969), a sugar house (where maple syrup is “sugared off”), a small ice house, the Edwin C. Remick House (Museum Center), and the Captain Enoch Remick House (open for guided tours only). Buildings may only be open for guided tours on the day of your visit.
Note: All of our historical buildings are subject to closure due to structural maintenance.
Learn more about the farmstead.