Holiday Fest coming to Bell County Museum
December 5, 2025
By David Stone
The Belton Journal
A free event at the Bell County Museum will give visitors the chance to learn about Christmas celebrations and winter traditions from around the world.
This year’s Holiday Fest will be celebrated on Saturday, Dec. 13, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., according to Kayte Ricketts, education coordinator for the museum.
“Holiday Fest is an annual event we have hosted since 2018,” she said. “It’s a free event with activities and crafts that explore Christmas traditions around the globe”.

Courtesy Photo
The Foster Youth Giving Tree program gives locals the opportunity to help foster children receive gifts this Christmas.
“This year, museum visitors will be exploring Christmas, Three Kings Day and Saint Nicholas Day,” Ricketts added.
“For Three Kings Day, visitors will be making crowns in honor of the three wise men who traveled to the birth of Jesus”.
“For Saint Nicholas Day, visitors will be making paper shoes,” she explained. “It is a German tradition to leave your shoes out for Saint Nicholas to leave treats and small gifts similar to Christmas stockings”.
There also will be a jingle Bell Maker Challenge
“Using jingle bells and Play-Doh, children are challenged to build something,” Ricketts said. “This is an open-ended activity with no wrong answers.”
While visiting the museum, be sure to check out its current temporary exhibit — Locals, Legends & Legacy. On display through Feb. 14, this exhibit features a curated collection of framed items from the Bell County Museum collection.
“Enjoy a wonderful variety of fine art, historic documents, portraits, framed artifacts, and the Custer Collection,” she said.
Permanent exhibits include Discover Bell County, The Gault Site: A Wealth of New Archaeological Evidence, and the Little River Log Cabin.
Located in the museum’s 1904 Historic Carnegie Library, the Discover Bell County exhibit takes visitors on a journey through Bell County history. Explore four themes of Bell County’s past: The Land, Agriculture and Ranching, Transportation and Industry, and Education and Culture. Each theme covers part of the story of Bell County.
The Gault exhibit includes large murals, discovery drawers, microscopes, and the film The Gault Project: An Adventure in Time, funded by the Texas Historical Foundation.
The Gault Site has been home to human beings for more than 13,000 years. It is strategically located in the Balcones Ecotone, the boundary zone of the Edwards Plateau and the Black Prairie/Coastal Plain Ecozone.
Analysis of materials at the Gault Site provides archaeologists with a unique look into the lifestyles of the earliest people in Texas and, by extension, the earliest peoples in the Americas. This exhibit features an interactive dig pit, a chance to be an archaeologist, a chalkboard for cave drawings, discovery drawers, and more.
The Little River Log Cabin was built in the 1850s near Little River/Academy, the area of earliest Anglo settlement in Bell County. The cabin features half-dovetail notching and was originally a “single-pen,” or one-room house, with side-facing gables.
In 1995, Grant and Jeanny Smith purchased the cabin and had it dismantled by Salado artist Lonnie Edwards. In 2001, the Smiths donated the cabin to the Bell County Museum.
The cabin is not the original size, nor are all of the stones and logs placed in their original positions. However, the logs and stones are original to the 1850s cabin.
For additional information about the Bell County Museum and its visiting and permanent exhibits, visit www.bell-countymuseum.org. The museum is open Tuesday through Friday from noon to 5 p.m., and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The museum will be closed Thursday, Nov. 27, through Saturday, Nov. 29, in observance of the Thanksgiving holiday. It will reopen at noon Tuesday, Dec. 2.









