This museum dates from the 1880s when the 24-foot-square residence was the envy of dugout dwellers for miles around. Exhibits, which include a mounted wildlife display, relate the story of 12,000 years of human adaptation to the flat, treeless, wind-swept plains of north Texas. On the grounds are an art gallery, a restored 24-foot windmill, a vintage caboose with railroad exhibits, a reconstructed dugout shelter as well as a barn, buckboards and hardware.