Almanac note · History and culture
Santa Rosa is home to a statewide California Indian cultural center
Santa Rosa has wine country, redwood country, garden history, and Peanuts history. It also has a cultural stop that reaches much farther back. The California Indian Museum and Cultural Center is Native-led. It shares California Indian history, culture, leadership, and living knowledge.
The center began in 1991. Native leaders started it, including Joseph Myers, who was Pomo. It became a nonprofit in 1996 at the Presidio of San Francisco. In 2001, it moved to Sonoma County. Its Santa Rosa home sits in the homelands of six Tribes and near an urban Native community, so the location is part of the story too.
The museum also looks at life today. Its work includes exhibits, education, youth programs, online resources, and space for Native voices. Visitors can see exhibits such as Ishi, Precious Cargo, the Edward S. Curtis collection, and the Dugan Aguilar Collection. They can also learn that California Indian communities are present and active today.
That makes this stop useful for anyone trying to understand California with care. Missions, ranchos, gold, railroads, movies, and technology all came later. California Indian people and homelands came first. Santa Rosa gives visitors a place where that story is told with Native leadership at the center.
Where to see it
California Indian Museum and Cultural Center on Aero Drive in Santa Rosa.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 2, 2026
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Connected places
Where it fits on the map
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