Cincinnati offers a variety of museums and galleries, fine dining and excellent shopping. The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center focuses on the struggle for freedom experienced by runaway slaves and opened in 2004. It is the first of its kind in the USA and features five history galleries, a changing exhibits gallery, a theater, and research and education centers, as well as the Underground Railroad Children’s Exhibit and Slave Jail. The Contemporary Arts Center (painting, sculpture, photography and other media) moved to its current home, the Lois & Richard Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art, fairly recently, and the Cincinnati Art Museum (masterpieces and African-American art) gained a wing and a free admission policy. The Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden also boasts new attractions for 2005, while the Taft Museum of Art underwent its grand reopening in May 2004 after a US$22 million renovation and expansion. Cincinnati’s museums include the Behringer-Crawford Museum (archaeology, palaeontology, wildlife, history and art); Harriet Beecher Stowe House (home of the author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin); the Skirball Museum (Jewish history, artifacts, ceremonial objects and paintings); and the Museum Center at Cincinnati Union Terminal, where the Cincinnati Historical Museum and the Cincinnati Museum of Natural History are housed in an Art Deco train station; a ‘Baseball as America’ exhibition will delight sports fans. Other attractions include riverboat and steamboat cruises on the Ohio River; the Basilica of the Assumption, with the largest stained-glass window in the world; the Kentucky Horse Center, an escorted tour of a working thoroughbred-training facility; Kentucky Horse Park, a museum celebrating the horse (where horse riding is also available); and the William Howard Taft National Historic Site, the birthplace of the former US President.