CACH-Exeter Logo

CACHE brings to life the art, culture and history of California’s heartland.

CACH-Exeter Logo

CACHE brings to life the art, culture and history of California’s heartland.

Exeter Fall Festival Museum Tour at CACHE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 9/18/24
Contact: Dawn Sabala, Executive Administrator
info@cach-exeter.org
CACHE
125 S. B St., Exeter, CA 93221
559-592-5900

Hours: Fri.: 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m., Sat.: 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun.: Noon -4 p.m.

Exeter Fall Festival Museum Tour at CACHE

Exeter, Ca – The Center for Art, Culture, and History—Exeter, or CACHE, will be participating in the Exeter Fall Festival with a museum tour on Sunday, October 13 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

Tour highlights include a Yokuts exhibit titled Yokuts: “The People” of the San Joaquin Valley. The exhibit features a handwoven basket display currently on loan from Wukchumni Indian tribe representative, Jennifer Malone, an authentic Tule Boat, and hands-on activities for kids, including hulling and grinding an acorn and rock painting. Visitors can also view the current art exhibit, Illumination, featuring original watercolor and acrylic paintings by Krista Fulbright, and a new permanent sculpture exhibit by Adrian Green titled Adrian Green: Work of Art.

Other exhibits include Elements of Industry: Casting into the Future, telling the story of Waterman Industries, an irrigation equipment supplier that opened its doors in Exeter in 1912, and Exeters of the World, a whimsical look at different towns around the world named Exeter, including Exeter, UK.

This event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit our website at www.cach-exeter.org.

About CACHE

The Center for Art, Culture, and History- Exeter (CACHE), formerly known as the Exeter Art Gallery and Museum Association, rebranded in 2023 in order to communicate its new mission of bringing to life the art, culture, and history of California’s heartland. The new museum board hosts quarterly art exhibitions showcasing local and regional artists. CACHE’s historical displays are committed to telling the stories of the people and events that have shaped our Tulare County area from its earliest days. We are proud to present a variety of educational programs and unique community events, and we invite everyone to experience the rich culture of Exeter.

This wooden church with a bell tower was an Exeter icon through the 1910s, 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. In the 1950s, the church leadership decided it was time to replace it with a new one, and by 1962, the current facility was in place.

By the 1970s, Exeter was home to eighteen churches. Each one has a story. Each came together around a group of people who took advantage of the freedom to choose how and with whom they wanted to worship God. There are currently ten church communities in Exeter.