Highlights
An Immersive, Interactive Journey Unlike Any Other.
Groupon Customer Reviews
Customer Photos
Report Photo
Helpful
Error submitting request
Thank you for your response
About This Deal
History is closer than you think. Learn the history of the Holocaust, explore how human rights have progressed, understand America's journey towards human and civil rights, and discover Upstanders who fought injustice.
What we offer
Tickets are valid all day. Visitors have access to a free downloadable audio tour available in English and Spanish. This deal includes admission options for adults, seniors, and students. Visitors have flexibility in choosing their preferred visiting days between weekdays or weekends. Each option ensures full access to all exhibitions without missing any features of this remarkable experience.
- Adult Admission for One, Valid Monday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday: Discover exhibits on select weekdays
- Adult Admission for One, Valid Saturday or Sunday: Enjoy weekend access to engaging displays
- Senior Admission for One, Valid Monday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday: Weekday admission tailored for seniors
- Senior Admission for One, Valid Saturday or Sunday: Weekend entry available for seniors seeking knowledge
- Student Admission for One, Valid Monday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday: Midweek opportunities open to students
- Student Admission for One, Valid Saturday or Sunday: Weekend exploration catered to students
Why you should grab the offer
Included with admission is our special exhibition, A Better Life for Their Children, and Dimensions in Testimony, a must-see experience that allows visitors to interact with virtual Holocaust survivors and ask them questions about their life and survival.
A Better Life for Their Children: Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools that Changed America. Photographs and Stories by Andrew Feiler. Discover one of the most transformative initiatives in American history forged by Booker T. Washington, a Black educator, author, and reformer, and Julius Rosenwald, a Jewish businessman and philanthropist. Between 1912 and 1937, their ambitious program partnered with local communities to build thousands of schools for Black children across the segregated South and Southwest. These schools countered the deep educational disparities of Jim Crow, had a profound impact on our nation, and fostered the generation who became civil rights leaders and activists. On view through August 17.