Butler

Butler City is the seat of government for Butler County. Whether you're from Butler, looking for local fun, or a future visitor planning your next trip, you can find your way around this wonderful city.

Butler City cherishes the historical, social, and cultural arts of the people and the rich heritage in the downtown corridor and adjacent neighborhoods. This community is a small town with emblems of enduring significance and influential character. Butler is a city that boasts a past rich in accomplishments and a future full of promise!

Discover the qualities that make the City such an enriching place to visit - the goodness of the people, the richness of our historical significance, and our geographic diversity. With the City's beauty and vibrancy, you will discover its uniqueness in the City of Butler.

Start your exploration of this city's history at the Butler Historical Society Museum. Then, enjoy the vibrant cultural activities taking place in and around Butler.

Butler City

Museums

Built in 1828 as a summer residence for Butler's only U.S. Senator, Walter Lowrie, this is the last remaining house of its type in the Butler area. A listing on the National Register of Historic Places honored its historical and architectural significance.
Red School House is the first public school in Butler, built in 1838 due to the Public School Act of 1836. It was used as a classroom until 1874, when a larger facility was built.
The original cabin, built by the Cooper family in 1810, was used as a county homestead. It was enlarged after the Civil War, and family descendants remained in it until 1963. In 1976, Cooper Cabin was deeded to the Butler County Historical Society.
Maridon is the only museum in the Western Pennsylvania region specializing in Asian culture, including art objects from China and Japan.

Organizations

Long before European colonists arrived, the land that is now Butler County, Pennsylvania, was under the control of the Iroquois Confederacy. This changed in 1753, when the French began establishing a series of forts in the region, culminating in the French and Indian War.