Historic Pensacola (located within the Pensacola Historic District) is a collection of 28 historical buildings and museums managed by the University of West Florida's Historic Trust. Historic Pensacola is located in downtown
Pensacola, Florida, situated between
Plaza Ferdinand VII and Seville Square.
Buildings and museums •
Pensacola Museum of History • Pensacola Children's Museum • Museum of Commerce: a reconstruction of a
Pensacola, Florida street scene based on businesses that operated in Pensacola between 1880 and 1910. The Museum consists of twenty properties; some are interpretive history sites. They include stores for toys, leather goods, hardware and music, a
print shop, a gas station, and a tram. The print shop contains one of the most complete collections of antique printing presses and type in the Southeast. •
Museum of Industry • Voices of Pensacola Multicultural Center •
Old Christ Church • Bowden Building: The lower floor houses classrooms used by the
University of West Florida and some of Historic Pensacola's collections. The upper floor houses Historic Pensacola's administration offices. • Tivoli High House: Historic boarding house now used as a ticket office •
Lavalle House •
Lear-Rocheblave House: Historic home restored to a 1920s boarding house •
Dorr House • Manuel Barrios Cottage •
Julee Cottage: a historic home, formerly owned by Julee Panton, a free woman of color and other black families • Barkley House • John Appleyard Cottage • Fountain Park • Colonial Archaeological Trail •
Pensacola Museum of Art Image gallery Image:Pensacola_HD_Julee03.jpg|Julee Cottage, 1805 Image:Pensacola_HD_Tivoli02.jpg|Tivoli House, 1976 replica of 1805 building Image:Pensacola Dorr House01.jpg|Clara Barkley Dorr House, 1871, residence of UWF president Image:Pensacola_HD_Lear-Rocheblave01.jpg|Lear Rocheblave House, 1890 Image:Pensacola_Old_Christ_Church03.jpg|Old Christ Church, 1763 Image:Pensacola_HD_Wentworth01.jpg|Pensacola Museum of History Image:Pensacola_HD_MOC02.jpg|Museum of Commerce Image:Pensacola HD MOI02.jpg|Museum of Industry ==References==