Twin City Model Railroad Museum
The golden age of model trains was 1946-1960, but in this large room it's still happening. Dozens of model railroads take over the space. One circles the fictional small town of Mattlin, complete with a redbrick two-story hotel and a church modeled after one in real-life Center City, Minn., which was a setting for the movie "Grumpy Old Men." There's even an entire block of New York City and a train track made of Legos, if your vibe is more big-city than Center City.
668 Transfer Road, Suite 8, St. Paul. $10 for ages 5 and older; family rates available. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Mon., Tue. & Fri.; 10-5 Sat.; noon-5 Sun. tcmrm.org
Julian H. Sleeper House
The most eccentric museum on this list is the former home of a St. Paul entrepreneur and theater lover, run by the house's current owner/occupant, Dr. Seth Hawkins. The front parlor is filled with ornate chairs and couches from the 1880s. Owls abound — more than 650 miniature birds and several taxidermied ones, too. Take a picture with a life-size figure of former President James Garfield, and see the business card of the man who assassinated him, Charles J. Guiteau. In the basement, another surprise: memorabilia from Slovenia, including a deck of tarot cards made by Boris Koba, a Nazi concentration camp prisoner who made it out.
66 S. St. Albans St., St. Paul. $8. By appointment only at 651-225-1505. julianhsleeperhouse.com)
Hmong Cultural Center
Heavy history is balanced with beautiful artistry to offer a neat picture of a complicated people. View embroidered belts and purses, dolls wearing colorful traditional Hmong dress and a rice sickle, knife sheath and machete from 1960s-'70s Laos. Posters detail the Hmong people's history, dating back to being pushed out of China in the 1700s and 1800s, to their role in the CIA's secret war from 1961-1975.
375 W. University Av., Suite 204, St. Paul. $5. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Fri. hmongcc.org
American Museum of Asmat Art
Opened in 2012 at the University of St. Thomas, this collection of artifacts from the Asmat, an indigenous people of New Guinea, was created by missionaries from the Crosier order who have worked in the region for the past six decades. Their fabulous finds include a magical necklace of pointy dog teeth, ancestor masks and 6-foot-tall surfboard-looking shields with sandy red and cream-colored swirls carved into them.
Anderson Student Center, corner of Summit and Cretin avenues, St. Paul. Free. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Mon.-Wed; 10-6 Thu.; 10-2 Fri.; noon-4 Sat. and Sun. during school year; see art.stthomas.edu/asmat for summer hours.