Curronian spit history museum is located in the northern part of Nida, not far from T. Mann’s memorial museum. In 1969, a museum was opened in the former Nida’s Lutheran church building. An exhibition at the museum introduced visitors to the formation of the Curronian spit, its people, nature, pursuits and other things. In 1989, the church was given back to the believers and the exposition was dismantled. In 1995, an exposition about people’s pursuits was opened and worked on for some time, and in 2002 a new exposition was opened at the Neringa‘s history museum on Pamaris Street. At the exposition you can see what local people used to do for a living (e.g. catching crows for food, making fishing equipment, making models of boats) as well as the history of Nida’s post. One of the brightest aspects of the exposition was its owner, Frydricho Casimiro Kuvert's 1785-year license that allowed him to brew bear at the tavern located in the building of the post office. Furthermore, a reproduction of the photographs and some maps introduces visitors to the postal road, that part of it went through Curronian Spit. It was important to the whole of Europe.