NC Museum of Dolls, Toys & Miniatures

NC Museum of Dolls, Toys & Miniatures A doll, toy, miniature, and train museum located at 440 South Salisbury Avenue, Spencer, NC 28159. We moved to a stunning new location in December 2024.
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The official page for the NC Museum of Dolls, Toys & Miniatures in Spencer, NC - a nonprofit museum that showcases dolls, toys, miniatures, trains, and more. We are open weekly Thursdays through Saturdays from 10 am to 4 pm. Our website is www.ncmdtm.org

Admission:
Adults - $10
Seniors and Military - $8
UFDC and NAME Members $8
Youth (4-15 Years Old) - $5
Children ages 3 and under - Fre

e! About us:
The North Carolina Museum of Dolls, Toys & Miniatures is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization founded in 2012 that is dedicated to the preservation, education, conservation, collecting, and appreciation of dolls, toys, and miniatures. Our museum includes a wide selection of dolls, dollhouses, miniatures, toys, model trains, and more across multiple decades and centuries. Come visit us and enjoy a joyful, enchanting experience for the whole family. All ages are welcome to enjoy treasures from the past and present! Our collection includes one-of-a-kind sights and histories ranging from Barbies and antique dolls to Lionel trains and model planes, incredible miniatures and dollhouse, and nostalgic toys through the decades and centuries. Plan your visit during our open hours or reach out to us to arrange a special experience for a group! Take advantage of the exclusive perks when you sign up to be a member of The NC Museum of Dolls, Toys & Miniatures! Membership benefits include free year-round admission, invitations to special member-only events, and sneak-peeks of new exhibits. We unite communities across generations in celebrating and understanding the unique art and history of dolls, toys, and miniatures. Our goal is to preserve the joy, passion, artistry, and historical legacy that these precious items contain and unite our community and hobbyists of all ages across the country in appreciation and play. Our doll, dollhouse, toy, model train, and miniature museum is one of only 30 such museums left in the country. We were founded in 2012 by the mother and sister of Amy Dawn Morris, a young woman and passionate collector who passed away just before her 22nd birthday. Amy and her sister, Beth, spent hours playing with dolls as children. Amy lived with Werdnig-Hoffman disease, a rare form of spinal muscular atrophy, and used a wheelchair for daily mobility. When playing with dolls, Amy was able to escape into another world where she could move freely, ride horses, dance, and imagine just about anything. That idea along with Amy’s sense of humor, love, kindness, and resilience inspired Beth and their mother, Susan, to start the NC Museum of Dolls, Toys & Miniatures after Amy passed away. One of Amy’s favorite dolls to collect were Bob Mackie Barbies, and Amy’s beloved Bob Mackie Barbies remain a part of the collection today. As we finished the move to our new location in December 2024, we were able to give Amy’s Barbie collection and her story a bigger spotlight so her legacy can be seen by our new visitors. Legacy is a big part of what we do. Whether it is a doll collection or a perfectly detailed dollhouse, we know that these collections reflect and represent the individual legacies of so many individuals, from collectors to skilled artists to entrepreneurs and innovators. Dolls and dollhouses capture centuries of culture and style and can tell us so much about traditions and values across different time periods. Preserving all of those elements - artistry, history, passion, and individual legacies - is why we do what we do here at the museum.

A birthday bonanza for the ages!! We are celebrating THREE museum birthdays this first week of June! Please send your bi...
06/02/2026

A birthday bonanza for the ages!! We are celebrating THREE museum birthdays this first week of June!

Please send your birthday felicitations to Ed and Gary from our exceptionally hardworking volunteer train team, and to Beth, our co-founder and director!

The countdown is on!! We are just 12 days away from the biggest doll day of the year on Saturday, June 13: World Doll Da...
06/01/2026

The countdown is on!! We are just 12 days away from the biggest doll day of the year on Saturday, June 13: World Doll Day!

We celebrate here in Spencer NC with FREE admission to the museum plus a free doll for every visitor!

You can also enjoy our HUGE World Doll Day Fill a Bag Sale within easy walking distance of the museum.

Do not miss it! World Doll Day is our chance to show that whether we are doll artists, collectors, history-lovers, restorers, or admirers, we are One Doll Family!

See the details at: Annual Fill-a-Bag Doll Sale & World Doll Day Celebrations

One wonderful thing about museums is that they give us the opportunity to embrace diversity, history, and culture every ...
05/30/2026

One wonderful thing about museums is that they give us the opportunity to embrace diversity, history, and culture every day and not just at certain times of the year. Here is such a small selection of Asian dolls we've shared over the past few years, from Ichimatsu to Door of Hope to Barbie to one-of-a-kind!

We are reaching the end of Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month. AAPI Month is an opportunity to celebrate the impact and legacy of generations of Asian and Pacific Islander Americans. May is the anniversary of the first wave of Japanese immigrants arriving in America back in 1843.

The term Asian American includes individuals with origin points associated with any of the original communities living in the Far East, Southeast Asia, or India, and Pacific Islander includes anyone with origin points with the original communities of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, and the Pacific Islands.

Do you know a lad or lass who is young (or young at heart), bright, and curious? We want to make sure that everyone with...
05/30/2026

Do you know a lad or lass who is young (or young at heart), bright, and curious? We want to make sure that everyone with an interest in our museum gets to enjoy it - regardless of their family's income level.

That's why we participate in Museums for All, a program under which we offer free admission to recipients of SNAP benefits.

Through Labor Day, active duty military families also visit our museum for free. Art, culture, nostalgia, history, and museums are for one and all!

This is Mark and Kim! They came to the museum today to celebrate their 44th wedding anniversary. This couple came from C...
05/30/2026

This is Mark and Kim! They came to the museum today to celebrate their 44th wedding anniversary.

This couple came from Concord NC to spend the day with us here in Spencer. Sir Spencer was so happy that they spent time with him on their special day!

A look at all the fun you can have in our gift shop this weekend when you visit - not to mention on World Doll Day on Ju...
05/29/2026

A look at all the fun you can have in our gift shop this weekend when you visit - not to mention on World Doll Day on June 13!!

As requested: photos of the interior of the beautiful "bears house" donated by the Ky Doll and Toy Museum.
05/29/2026

As requested: photos of the interior of the beautiful "bears house" donated by the Ky Doll and Toy Museum.

Did you know that the museum includes a special library for resource materials? Thanks to donors like Catherine Peterson...
05/29/2026

Did you know that the museum includes a special library for resource materials? Thanks to donors like Catherine Peterson, we've been able to expand with lots of books the library didn't have yet. Thank you!

If you have any doll or toy reference books at home that you rely on often, we'd love to hear about them. Which one has been the most useful to you?

A newer museum collection item to share as we recognize the Dionne quintuplets anniversary: Cloth representation of one ...
05/28/2026

A newer museum collection item to share as we recognize the Dionne quintuplets anniversary:

Cloth representation of one of the quints by Madame Alexander, dated about 1934 to 1936. She has a marked dress but otherwise no marks on the body.

This doll is in amazing condition for being nearly 100 years old.

(UPDATE: for those who asked about the hair color (the quints were not blonde) - the blonde hair does appear to be original to the doll. Thank you Sally for this find: https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/12-vintage-madame-alexander-cloth-2852945318

If we find out more about the reason why the hair was blonde, will share. Thank you for being curious!!)

May 28 marks the birthday of the Dionne quintuplets—the five Canadian sisters who were born two months premature and bec...
05/28/2026

May 28 marks the birthday of the Dionne quintuplets—the five Canadian sisters who were born two months premature and became the first quintuplets to survive past their infancy.

The Madame Alexander Doll Company got the sole rights to create Dionne quints dolls and released composition likenesses in 1936. The museum has an extensive collection, for which we thank our generous donors, including Elaine Dendzel.

Émilie, Marie, Cécile, Yvonne, and Annette have all passed away, with two of the sisters living into their 90s. The wide range of dolls and merchandise made in their images help us to remember their story, which is marked by both tragedy and adoration from millions of fans and doll collectors around the world.

When their quints were born, the Dionne family did not have electricity at their home. Their community rallied to help supply non-electric medical supplies, and women donated their own milk to the quints in exchange for payment, which was delivered by train to the quints.

The Red Cross took over their care (and the associated medical costs) after 4 months with their birth family, including building a hospital specifically for their care. The Ontario government passed an act in 1935 to make them wards until age 18, and the girls were subsequently monetized as a major tourist attraction.

In a setup that is shocking to consider today, the girls lived in “Quintland,” a place where they could be publicly observed each day while they played through one-way screens. They attracted about 3,000 people every day.

The sisters ultimately spoke about their difficult childhood, abuse, and how their care (and their income from advertising and more) was misused by the government, and they accepted a $4 million offer in restitution as well as a government apology.

Address

440 South Salisbury Avenue
Spencer, NC
28159

Opening Hours

Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm

Telephone

+17047629359

Website

https://www.instagram.com/ncdollmuseum/, https://www.tiktok.com/@ncdollmuseum, https://ncmdtm.org/ev

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