While the conception of the museum was born through the activities of the American bicentennial in 1975, the General Assembly of Virginia did not establish the Museum of
American Frontier Culture until July 1, 1986. The museum was officially opened to the public on September 9, 1988, with three permanent exhibits in place, the English Cattle Shed, the Irish Farmhouse, and the 1850s Farmhouse (then known as the American Farm Exhibit). Over the next three decades, the Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia expanded to include an English farm, German farm, West African site, Irish forge, American Indian site, 1760s settlement house, 1820s farm, 1840s schoolhouse, and 1860s African American church. Today visitors can explore the different outdoor exhibits and see how traditions evolved and changed throughout time as different immigrant groups learned from one another and begin integrating customs. This can be seen through the architecture of the buildings, the food that was eaten, and the music that was played for entertainment. During most of the year, the Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia has costumed interpreters in the farmhouse exhibits demonstrating the daily activities of the people who would have lived in the homes. == West Africa ==