The institution functions in the Domokos Gyula manor, a monument of architecture built in the classical style in 1831 on the foundation of an earlier Renaissance building. The collection was gathered by the local school teacher and collector Haszmann Pál and continued by his sons, the present curators of the museum. The visitors can admire a rich collection of local history and ethnography: furniture, costumes and textiles, daily life objects, documents and photographs, terracotta stoves. The museum has also an open air department, presenting wooden village houses brought from the surroundings, gates, funerary tokens, sculptural beams, a rich collection of agricultural machinery and tools.