fbpx
Wikipedia

Springfield Science Museum

The Springfield Science Museum is located in Springfield, Massachusetts, in the United States. Founded in 1859, the museum has operated in its current building since 1899. The building has undergone two expansions, in 1934[1] and 1970.[2] It is also home to the country's oldest operating projection planetarium, Seymour Planetarium.[3][4][5]

Springfield Science Museum
Former name
Springfield Ethnological and Natural History Museum
EstablishedDecember 1859
LocationSpringfield, Massachusetts, United States
Coordinates42°06′16″N 72°35′09″W / 42.10444°N 72.58583°W / 42.10444; -72.58583
TypeScience museum
DirectorJenny Powers
PresidentKay Simpson
Websitespringfieldmuseums.org

History edit

The Springfield Science Museum was founded in December 1859 at Springfield's City Hall,[2][6] originally as a natural history museum and curiosities collection.[7] It was moved to the City Library in 1871, when the library gained its own building separate from City Hall.[6] Early exhibits included geological displays of rocks and minerals, and Revolutionary War relics.[6][8] In the early 1890s the museum was moved once again, this time to the Art museum.[6] The museum's collections began being moved to its own building in February 1899,[6] and it opened as the Springfield Ethnological and Natural History Museum on October 16, 1899.[2][9]

In 1928, the museum received Miss Oita, one of 58 Japanese friendship dolls, which has remained in the museum's collection up to the present day.[10]

Exhibits present in the 1930s, which are still present in the current building, include the Native American Hall, with a diorama of two Native American men and one woman engaged in tool-making and cooking,[1][11] and Habitat Hall, which features dioramas of taxidermied animals in their natural habitats.[1] A Bird Hall also existed, with various local specimens and a case of extinct species (including the passenger pigeon, heath hen, and Carolina parakeet).[1] Another since-removed area was the Hall of Ethnology, which showcased Native American baskets and tools, traditional Greenlandic clothing, musical instruments from around the world, and dolls from around the world.[1]

Although not ready at the time of the museum's 1934 re-opening, the building did leave space for a planetarium, which would ultimately open in November 1937.[3][12] The museum turned to Chicopee locals Frank and Stanley Korkosz to create the planetarium's "star ball", as they were unable to afford equipment from Zeiss.[3][12]

In 1979 or 1980, the museum received a taxidermied polar bear, Snowball, who had lived at the Forest Park Zoo for 29 years.[13]

In 1986, a Massachusetts man stole "Indian artifacts" from the museum, as well as from five other Massachusetts museums; the artifacts were recovered in February 1987.[14]

Temporary exhibits hosted by the museum have covered a variety of topics, from natural gas (1993),[15] to extinction (1998),[16] to the history of bicycles (2002).[17]

Exhibits edit

 
Part of the African Hall

The African Hall features multiple taxidermied Savanna species, including a chimpanzee who lived at the Forest Park Zoo until 1967, and a giraffe, acquired in 1985, that died at a park in Oklahoma.[18]

The Dinosaur Hall includes a lifesize Tyrannosaurus rex model, which was installed in April 1975.[19] The hall also includes a cast of Stegosaurus, and both a legbone of Alamosaurus and fragment of a tyrannosaurid believed to represent a new species, both collected in a 1920s Amherst College expedition led by Fred Brewster Loomis.[20][21][22]

The museum's planetarium, Seymour Planetarium, which opened in November 1937,[12][3] was one of a few of the era not built by Zeiss.[23] It was remodeled and officially reopened in April 2023.[12]

The museum has its own observatory with a 20-inch (51 cm) telescope that is periodically open to the public.[24]

Repatriation edit

In 1985, a Southington council member requested that the museum return the Luman Andrews collection, a collection of Native American objects collected by a Southington resident, to the Connecticut town from which he originated. The collection had originally been donated to the museum in 1921.[25] The collection was loaned to Southington for a year and opened there in September 1985.[26]

The museum announced their intentions to repatriate two Seneca masks in 1997,[27] and Klamath jewelry[28] and a Navajo pouch In 2002.[29] The museum repatriated one set of human remains to Hawaii in 1997.[30]

In 2013, the museum's curator found a mid-19th century Tlingit war helmet in the museum's collection, making it one of fewer than a hundred known examples.[31][32] The helmet had been given to the museum sometime in 1899, but was miscatalogued as an "Aleution hat".[31][32] The Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska announced at the time they intended to request repatriation of the helmet.[31]

According to NAGPRA, the museum had 148 Native American remains in the 1990s.[33] A 2004 report from the museum reported that 84 remains were made available for return.[33][34] 2007 marked the most recent year of repatriation, at which point 78% of all reported remains had been made available for return to tribes.[33] In 2023, the museum reported having repatriated 25 additional remains, although these are not documented by NAGPRA.[35][36] At one point, the museum had more than 600 objects associated with funerals; as of January 2023, 562 had been made available for return.[33] As of October 2023, the museum self-reported having 31 human remains and 109 associated funerary objects.[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Reconstructed Museum, Closed For 15 Months, Opens Next Sunday". Springfield Republican. October 14, 1934. pp. 47, 56.
  2. ^ a b c "Springfield Science Museum". Springfield Museums. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  3. ^ a b c d Rowan, Patrick (2022-11-02). "Patrick Rowan's Skywatch: Springfield Science Museum celebrates Chicopee's Korkosz brothers' 'starball'". masslive. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  4. ^ Sanderson, Richard (2023-04-21). "Historic 'starball' gets a digital partner inside Springfield's Seymour Planetarium (Commentary)". masslive. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  5. ^ Sanderson, Richard (September 2013). "When ingenuity was king: Seymour Planetarium celebrates 75th anniversary" (PDF). Planetarian. 42 (3): 24.
  6. ^ a b c d e "In and About Springfield - The Museum in Its Three Homes". Springfield Sunday Republican. February 26, 1899. p. 10.
  7. ^ Tuthill, Paul (2019-05-06). "Plans Announced To Update, Refurbish Springfield Science Museum". WAMC. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  8. ^ "Local Notices". Springfield Daily Republican. September 12, 1895. p. 8.
  9. ^ "Opening of Science Building. Exhibits All Ready and to be Shown To-Morrow". Springfield Sunday Republican. October 15, 1899. p. 11.
  10. ^ "Miss Oita". Springfield Museums. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  11. ^ "Issues of tribal membership and curator experience in complaint over Springfield museum exhibit". Maine Public. 2022-11-25. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  12. ^ a b c d Conway, Matt (2023-05-02). "Science Museum unveils remodeled Seymour Planetarium". Reminder Publications. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  13. ^ "Polar Bear". Springfield Museums. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  14. ^ "Man confesses to museum theft". Record-Journal. May 17, 1988. p. 13.
  15. ^ "Natural gas". The Telegraph. September 19, 1993. pp. H-6.
  16. ^ "Story of Extinction". The Day. April 26, 1998. pp. C7.
  17. ^ "Rolling out History". The Robesonian. April 24, 2002. pp. 7C.
  18. ^ "Stuffed Giraffe Taken to Museum". The Lewiston Journal. October 3, 1985. p. 25.
  19. ^ Kelly, Ray (2015-03-18). "T. rex celebrates 40th at Springfield Science Museum". masslive. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  20. ^ Sullivan, Robert M.; Lucas, Spencer G. (2016-01-01). Fossil Record 5: Bulletin 74. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science. pp. 61–66.
  21. ^ "Possible New Tyrannosaur Species Uncovered". Springfield Museums. 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  22. ^ Roman, Elizabeth (December 4, 2014). "Move over T. rex; Springfield Science Museum displays bone belonging to new dinosaur species". Masslive. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
  23. ^ "Science » The Museums". Springfield Museums. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  24. ^ The Springfield Stars Club. Reflector.org. Retrieved on 2013-08-21.
  25. ^ Galayda, Laureen (June 13, 1985). "Effort started to return Indian object collection". Record-Journal. p. 45. Retrieved August 29, 2023.
  26. ^ "Indian artifacts returning to town". Record-Journal. September 27, 1985. p. 31. Retrieved August 29, 2023.
  27. ^ McManamon, Francis P. (September 3, 1997). "Notice of Intent to Repatriate Cultural Items from New York in the Possession of the Springfield Science Museum, Springfield, MA". Federal Register. 62 (170). Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  28. ^ "Notice of Intent to Repatriate Cultural Items in the Possession of the Springfield Science Museum, Springfield, MA". Federal Register. July 11, 2002 – via Casetext.
  29. ^ Stearns, Robert (June 18, 2002). "Notice of Intent to Repatriate a Cultural Item in the Possession of the Springfield Science Museum, Springfield, MA" (PDF). Federal Register. 67 (117).
  30. ^ Ayau, Edward Halealoha (2021-05-01). "Sailing to the Edge of the Hawaiian Universe". Ka Wai Ola. Retrieved 2023-11-01.
  31. ^ a b c Wallis, David (2014-03-19). "Golden Age of Discovery ... Down in the Basements". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  32. ^ a b Tuthill, Paul (2013-12-18). "Rare Artifact, Misidentified, Found In Museum Storage". WAMC. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  33. ^ a b c d Suozzo, Andrea; Ngu, Ash (2023-01-11). "Springfield Science Museum — The Repatriation Project". ProPublica. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  34. ^ Hutt, Sherry (August 12, 2004). "Notice of Inventory Completion: Springfield Science Museum, Springfield, MA; Correction" (PDF). Federal Register.
  35. ^ "Dozens of Native remains from western Mass. still in museums, despite decades-old repatriation law". New England Public Media. 2023-05-24. Retrieved 2023-08-29.
  36. ^ a b Jochem, Greta (2023-10-22). "Why are thousands of Native American human remains still held in Mass. collections?". masslive.com. Retrieved 2023-11-01.

springfield, science, museum, located, springfield, massachusetts, united, states, founded, 1859, museum, operated, current, building, since, 1899, building, undergone, expansions, 1934, 1970, also, home, country, oldest, operating, projection, planetarium, se. The Springfield Science Museum is located in Springfield Massachusetts in the United States Founded in 1859 the museum has operated in its current building since 1899 The building has undergone two expansions in 1934 1 and 1970 2 It is also home to the country s oldest operating projection planetarium Seymour Planetarium 3 4 5 Springfield Science MuseumFormer nameSpringfield Ethnological and Natural History MuseumEstablishedDecember 1859LocationSpringfield Massachusetts United StatesCoordinates42 06 16 N 72 35 09 W 42 10444 N 72 58583 W 42 10444 72 58583TypeScience museumDirectorJenny PowersPresidentKay SimpsonWebsitespringfieldmuseums wbr org Contents 1 History 2 Exhibits 3 Repatriation 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory editThe Springfield Science Museum was founded in December 1859 at Springfield s City Hall 2 6 originally as a natural history museum and curiosities collection 7 It was moved to the City Library in 1871 when the library gained its own building separate from City Hall 6 Early exhibits included geological displays of rocks and minerals and Revolutionary War relics 6 8 In the early 1890s the museum was moved once again this time to the Art museum 6 The museum s collections began being moved to its own building in February 1899 6 and it opened as the Springfield Ethnological and Natural History Museum on October 16 1899 2 9 In 1928 the museum received Miss Oita one of 58 Japanese friendship dolls which has remained in the museum s collection up to the present day 10 Exhibits present in the 1930s which are still present in the current building include the Native American Hall with a diorama of two Native American men and one woman engaged in tool making and cooking 1 11 and Habitat Hall which features dioramas of taxidermied animals in their natural habitats 1 A Bird Hall also existed with various local specimens and a case of extinct species including the passenger pigeon heath hen and Carolina parakeet 1 Another since removed area was the Hall of Ethnology which showcased Native American baskets and tools traditional Greenlandic clothing musical instruments from around the world and dolls from around the world 1 Although not ready at the time of the museum s 1934 re opening the building did leave space for a planetarium which would ultimately open in November 1937 3 12 The museum turned to Chicopee locals Frank and Stanley Korkosz to create the planetarium s star ball as they were unable to afford equipment from Zeiss 3 12 In 1979 or 1980 the museum received a taxidermied polar bear Snowball who had lived at the Forest Park Zoo for 29 years 13 In 1986 a Massachusetts man stole Indian artifacts from the museum as well as from five other Massachusetts museums the artifacts were recovered in February 1987 14 Temporary exhibits hosted by the museum have covered a variety of topics from natural gas 1993 15 to extinction 1998 16 to the history of bicycles 2002 17 Exhibits edit nbsp Part of the African Hall The African Hall features multiple taxidermied Savanna species including a chimpanzee who lived at the Forest Park Zoo until 1967 and a giraffe acquired in 1985 that died at a park in Oklahoma 18 The Dinosaur Hall includes a lifesize Tyrannosaurus rex model which was installed in April 1975 19 The hall also includes a cast of Stegosaurus and both a legbone of Alamosaurus and fragment of a tyrannosaurid believed to represent a new species both collected in a 1920s Amherst College expedition led by Fred Brewster Loomis 20 21 22 The museum s planetarium Seymour Planetarium which opened in November 1937 12 3 was one of a few of the era not built by Zeiss 23 It was remodeled and officially reopened in April 2023 12 The museum has its own observatory with a 20 inch 51 cm telescope that is periodically open to the public 24 Repatriation editIn 1985 a Southington council member requested that the museum return the Luman Andrews collection a collection of Native American objects collected by a Southington resident to the Connecticut town from which he originated The collection had originally been donated to the museum in 1921 25 The collection was loaned to Southington for a year and opened there in September 1985 26 The museum announced their intentions to repatriate two Seneca masks in 1997 27 and Klamath jewelry 28 and a Navajo pouch In 2002 29 The museum repatriated one set of human remains to Hawaii in 1997 30 In 2013 the museum s curator found a mid 19th century Tlingit war helmet in the museum s collection making it one of fewer than a hundred known examples 31 32 The helmet had been given to the museum sometime in 1899 but was miscatalogued as an Aleution hat 31 32 The Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska announced at the time they intended to request repatriation of the helmet 31 According to NAGPRA the museum had 148 Native American remains in the 1990s 33 A 2004 report from the museum reported that 84 remains were made available for return 33 34 2007 marked the most recent year of repatriation at which point 78 of all reported remains had been made available for return to tribes 33 In 2023 the museum reported having repatriated 25 additional remains although these are not documented by NAGPRA 35 36 At one point the museum had more than 600 objects associated with funerals as of January 2023 562 had been made available for return 33 As of October 2023 the museum self reported having 31 human remains and 109 associated funerary objects 36 See also editQuadrangle Springfield Massachusetts References edit a b c d e Reconstructed Museum Closed For 15 Months Opens Next Sunday Springfield Republican October 14 1934 pp 47 56 a b c Springfield Science Museum Springfield Museums Retrieved 2023 08 29 a b c d Rowan Patrick 2022 11 02 Patrick Rowan s Skywatch Springfield Science Museum celebrates Chicopee s Korkosz brothers starball masslive Retrieved 2023 08 29 Sanderson Richard 2023 04 21 Historic starball gets a digital partner inside Springfield s Seymour Planetarium Commentary masslive Retrieved 2023 11 01 Sanderson Richard September 2013 When ingenuity was king Seymour Planetarium celebrates 75th anniversary PDF Planetarian 42 3 24 a b c d e In and About Springfield The Museum in Its Three Homes Springfield Sunday Republican February 26 1899 p 10 Tuthill Paul 2019 05 06 Plans Announced To Update Refurbish Springfield Science Museum WAMC Retrieved 2023 08 29 Local Notices Springfield Daily Republican September 12 1895 p 8 Opening of Science Building Exhibits All Ready and to be Shown To Morrow Springfield Sunday Republican October 15 1899 p 11 Miss Oita Springfield Museums Retrieved 2023 11 01 Issues of tribal membership and curator experience in complaint over Springfield museum exhibit Maine Public 2022 11 25 Retrieved 2023 08 29 a b c d Conway Matt 2023 05 02 Science Museum unveils remodeled Seymour Planetarium Reminder Publications Retrieved 2023 08 29 Polar Bear Springfield Museums Retrieved 2023 11 01 Man confesses to museum theft Record Journal May 17 1988 p 13 Natural gas The Telegraph September 19 1993 pp H 6 Story of Extinction The Day April 26 1998 pp C7 Rolling out History The Robesonian April 24 2002 pp 7C Stuffed Giraffe Taken to Museum The Lewiston Journal October 3 1985 p 25 Kelly Ray 2015 03 18 T rex celebrates 40th at Springfield Science Museum masslive Retrieved 2023 08 29 Sullivan Robert M Lucas Spencer G 2016 01 01 Fossil Record 5 Bulletin 74 New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science pp 61 66 Possible New Tyrannosaur Species Uncovered Springfield Museums 2014 12 10 Retrieved 2022 02 19 Roman Elizabeth December 4 2014 Move over T rex Springfield Science Museum displays bone belonging to new dinosaur species Masslive Retrieved February 19 2022 Science The Museums Springfield Museums Retrieved 20 December 2014 The Springfield Stars Club Reflector org Retrieved on 2013 08 21 Galayda Laureen June 13 1985 Effort started to return Indian object collection Record Journal p 45 Retrieved August 29 2023 Indian artifacts returning to town Record Journal September 27 1985 p 31 Retrieved August 29 2023 McManamon Francis P September 3 1997 Notice of Intent to Repatriate Cultural Items from New York in the Possession of the Springfield Science Museum Springfield MA Federal Register 62 170 Retrieved 2023 11 01 Notice of Intent to Repatriate Cultural Items in the Possession of the Springfield Science Museum Springfield MA Federal Register July 11 2002 via Casetext Stearns Robert June 18 2002 Notice of Intent to Repatriate a Cultural Item in the Possession of the Springfield Science Museum Springfield MA PDF Federal Register 67 117 Ayau Edward Halealoha 2021 05 01 Sailing to the Edge of the Hawaiian Universe Ka Wai Ola Retrieved 2023 11 01 a b c Wallis David 2014 03 19 Golden Age of Discovery Down in the Basements The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 08 29 a b Tuthill Paul 2013 12 18 Rare Artifact Misidentified Found In Museum Storage WAMC Retrieved 2023 08 29 a b c d Suozzo Andrea Ngu Ash 2023 01 11 Springfield Science Museum The Repatriation Project ProPublica Retrieved 2023 08 29 Hutt Sherry August 12 2004 Notice of Inventory Completion Springfield Science Museum Springfield MA Correction PDF Federal Register Dozens of Native remains from western Mass still in museums despite decades old repatriation law New England Public Media 2023 05 24 Retrieved 2023 08 29 a b Jochem Greta 2023 10 22 Why are thousands of Native American human remains still held in Mass collections masslive com Retrieved 2023 11 01 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Springfield Science Museum amp oldid 1192104671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.