3 Best Sights in Central North Carolina, North Carolina

High Point Museum and Historical Park

Fodor's choice

Wander through the 1786 John Haley House and the 1801 Hoggatt House, where rotating exhibits highlight Piedmont history and Quaker heritage with local artifacts. On Saturdays, costumed reenactors demonstrate trades like traditional blacksmithing. The museum is home to native son John Coltrane's childhood piano and a school bus cab with operational lights that's fun for kids.

Mendenhall Homeplace

A well-preserved example of 19th-century domestic architecture, this homestead (including the main house and several outbuildings) sits in a cove along a peaceful creek. As Quakers, the Mendenhalls opposed slavery, and here you can find one of the few surviving false-bottom wagons used to help those enslaved escape to freedom on the Underground Railroad.

Come in July, when kids can learn how to make a corn-husk doll or design a quilt square during the Village Fair.

603 W. Main St., Jamestown, North Carolina, 27282, USA
336-454–3819
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $5, Closed Sun. and Mon., March-Dec.: Tues.–Fri. 11–3, Sat. 1–4 Jan.-Feb.: Fri. 11-3, Sat. 1-4

World's Largest Chest of Drawers

In the 1920s, this building shaped like an 18th-century chest of drawers was constructed to call attention to the city's standing as the "furniture capital of the world." The 36-foot-high building, complete with a 6-foot-long pair of socks dangling from one of its drawers, remains one of the strangest sights in North Carolina to this day. Nearby Furnitureland South has actually built a much larger chest of drawers as the facade to one of its showrooms, although it is not freestanding.

Recommended Fodor's Video