From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Acadia N.P. Museum Development
Acadia N.P. i Museum
Development
the
See also NPS : 1915-20
bug + Early year
These files
A MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY IS NEEDED IN
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
Nature-guide work began in Acadia National Park in June, 1932,
with the temporary 3-month's appointment of a ranger-naturalist.
That summer his headquarters were in the rear room of the Acadia
National Park Information Office. Since the ranger-naturalist was
too busy with a new and intensive summer program of guided field trips
and lectures there was no time for collecting natural history speci-
mens, but even so the room designated as his headquarters was
inadequate. Secretarial work, writing and mimeographing the "Nature
Notes" publication and programs, painting of posters and announce-
ments, frequently receiving visitors to the National Park, - for all
these and for other duties the place allotted was not a satisfactory
one. The ranger-naturalist was recalled on May 1, 1933.
The nature-guide work was placed on a permanent basis in Acadia
National Park with the establishment of the new Junior Park Naturalist
position in the summer of 1933. Aside from planning for and conduct-
ing the intensive summer program the naturalist had time to make
collections of the local flora, fauna, and geology and to interview
prospective donors of desirable natural history specimens. The
material accumulated, equipment to take care of it was added, and the
need for a more satisfactory location to serve as an office, storage
room, and work shop became acute.
Late in November, 1933, through the influence exerted and the
interest manifested by Supt. George B. Dorr, the park naturalist's
2
headquarters were moved to a larger room in the basement of the Jesup
Memorial Library in Bar Harbor. Although less conveniently located,
the room was far more comfortable. Nevertheless at the time of moving
into the new quarters only about one-half the equipment and specimens
could be housed in the new room.
Since that time the number of specimens, books, periodicals, items
of office furniture, and amount of equipment has increased to such an
extent that space in four or five buildings is utilized for its housing.
Two of the buildings hich material has been stored are not under
the control of Acadia National Park while only one is fireproof. All
these buildings are inadequate from various standpoints - location,
temperatures, humidity, light, and others. The storage of very valuable
specimens in such places would be quite out of the question.
Some of the larger specimens now on hand include:
14 large mounted birds
5 mounted mammals
1 very large mounted fish
100 skulls of various mammals
300 jars of preserved mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fishes,
and marine invertebrates
26 sets of antlers (deer and moose)
2 large mounted lobsters
Boxes of geological, entomological, archeological,
botanical, and other specimens
Some of the larger items of equipment include:
4 relief models of Acadia National Park - each measuring
5 ft. X 7 ft.
10 glass-faced exhibit stands
2 large specimen cabinets
1 desk
1 filing case
1 book case
3
1100 metal nature-trail signs
3 large flower-exhibit stands
1 large exhibit table
1 typewriter and table
1 mimeograph machine and table
130 flower pots and saucers
2 large framed Audubon prints - loaned by Mr. Dorr
500 books loaned by Mr. Dorr and Mr. Stupks
Boxes containing museum bottles, traps, office supplies,
bulletins, and miscellaneous equipment.
Many items of equipment have been requested while museum specimens
are constantly being added.
Very valuable and extensive collections of natural history objects
which have local significance might be acquired if the persons possessing
them were to be assured that their donation would be given proper
housing and proper care. Unlike some eastern states, Maine has not
been exploited by institutions and individuals who seek collected and
preserved natural history material for their own collections. Con-
sequently much of great worth might be secured by a museum located in
this National Park.
A museum located here would be visited by many thousands of
tourists each year. It would serve to instruct and orient the public
who, after visiting it would go away with a far greater understanding
of this seacoast National Park. The questions which are asked by the
visiting multitudes time and again would be answered in a museum.
Only a fraction of this multitude can ever be reached by the nature-
guide staff.
A museum would serve to invite and to provide room and equipment
for biologists and geologists whose research would benefit the park
4
immeasurably. At present the park can derive no such benefit from
capable and willing outside sources.
A museum would centralize the various nature-guide services. Under
the same roof where specimens would be on exhibit there would be the
offices of the park naturalist and his staff, the laboratory, storage
rooms, library, lecture hall, photographic dark room, etc. Here also
various out-door exhibits such as tide pool display, wildflower exhibits,
nature trail, etc. might be concentrated.
Provided these people can find our present so-called museum, the
visitors who have been to the museums in our western National Parks
cannot help but be disappointed with the present museum situation in
Acadia National Park. Whereas a national park museum should be so
situated, constructed, equipped, and the exhibits so arranged as to
impart the very essence of the wonderful area which it represents, the
present nature-guide headquarters is entirely inadequate.
Respectfully submitted,
Arthur Stupka
Park Naturalist
January 16, 1935
Run
Here's a copy of
a 1, you may find
interesting.
-Join
U.S.Dept.Interior
Fib.
6:50
MUSEUM CURATORSHIP IN THE
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
1904-1982
Ralph H. Lewis
Department of the Interior
National Park Service
Curatorial Services Division
Washington, D.C.
1993
Note: See Abbe Meegeonfile.
vii
PREFACE
Museums have played vital roles in interpreting park resources and themes
to the public. Like museums elsewhere, park museums are defined largely
by the work of curators. Curators gather and care for collections of objects,
record and study them, and use them in exhibits and other interpretive
media. In the national parks work of this kind went on for years before any
staff member received the title of curator, and many people with other
titles-superintendents, rangers, naturalists, historians, archeologists, and
clerical and custodial workers-still do such work. Conservators, museum
registrars, exhibit designers, preparators, and technicians regularly
collaborate with curators as different sorts of museum specialists. They are
all part of curatorship to the extent that they help acquire, take care of, or
use museum specimens. They have created much of the history in the pages
that follow.
Arthur C. Allen conceived and initiated this study while chief of the
Division of Museum Services at the National Park Service's Harpers Ferry
Center. He hoped that a more complete picture of how curatorial work had
developed in the Park Service might clarify long-standing problems his
division faced. Ten months, he thought, should suffice for someone familiar
with the background of the museum program to search out and compile a
trustworthy digest of the facts. A purchase order dated August 3, 1978,
outlined the project's proposed scope and provided for incidental expenses
the research might entail. This writer promptly began work, but the sources
proved much more voluminous and scattered than anticipated. Although the
study gathered material Allen found useful, research and writing were far
from complete when he transferred from the museum program to the Blue
Ridge Parkway in 1983. Chief Curator Ann Hitchcock, who inherited the
curatorial problems in acute form upon her appointment in 1980, encour-
aged continuation of the project.
It became apparent early that a review limited to curatorial matters in
a narrow sense would fail to place them adequately in context. The
curatorial imperatives had been SO closely interwoven into the whole fabric
of museum work in the parks that they resisted proper analysis in isolation.
Consequently, this study first traces growth of the museum program as a
whole. The first five chapters chronicle museum development in the
national parks from the earliest park museums to 1982. The sixth chapter
examines the distinctive development of furnished historic structure
museums in the parks. The last three chapters focus more sharply on the
curatorial aspects of park museums: the collections, their management, and
their care.
viii
PREFACE
The National Park Service History Collection in the Harpers Ferry
Center Library was the principal source of data used in this study. What
usefulness the resulting document has owes much to those responsible for
the collection: David H. Wallace as the initiator, Richard W. Russell as its
first curator, Ruthanne Heriot as special collection librarian, and David
Nathanson as chief of HFC's Branch of Library, Archives, and Graphics
Research. Nathanson's knowledge of the collection and its organization and
his sustained professional helpfulness toward its use were reflected in the
effective cooperation received from his staff, especially library technician
Nancy Lee Potts and secretaries Beverley Foltz and Susan Myers.
Richard Russell made an additional important contribution by giving the
writer access to diaries of his father, Carl P. Russell, and letters between
his father and mother concerning day-to-day developments during critical
formative periods of the Park Service museum program. These manuscripts
valuably supplemented the carefully preserved and organized Carl Parcher
Russell Papers in the archives of the Washington State University Library
at Pullman. The writer acknowledges effective assistance from the chief of
the library's Manuscripts-Archives Division in consulting this collection
also.
Chief Curator Ann Hitchcock supported work on the study in numerous
ways. She permitted continued use of office facilities, opened Curatorial
Services Division files, reviewed drafts, and made many constructive
suggestions. Members of her staff, especially Anthony M. Knapp, were
also supportive. Art Allen and Thomas Vaughan took active interest in the
project as long as they remained at Harpers Ferry and continued to review
chapter drafts and provide helpful comments after moving to new responsi-
bilities. In the division's Harpers Ferry unit all the staff curators including
Richard Borges, Gordon Gay, Anne Jordan, Diana Pardue, and Suzanne
Schell as well as museum specialist Donald Cumberland supplied needed
data or offered leads in answer to the writer's frequent questions. In later
stages John Hunter helped surmount technical difficulties. Staff curator
Kathleen Triggs Byrne helped especially in accessing National Catalog and
clearinghouse details. Carolyn Moler, unit secretary, provided essential
assistance both informational and technical, and her well-kept files were an
important source of data. Clerk-typists Doris Basch and Anna Petry ably
supplemented her technical help.
Harpers Ferry Center staff members aided the project on numerous
occasions. Personnel officer Shirley H. Caniford and her staff, including
Marilyn Longerbeam and Carolyn West, filled in employment dates for
several significant museum workers whose records were incomplete in other
sources. The personnel staff also supplied information on classification
standards for Park Service museum positions. Sarah M. Olson, chief of the
Division of Historic Furnishings, and David Wallace helpfully reviewed the
ix
chapter on furnished historic structure museums and opened the Vera Craig
files. John Demer as chief, Division of Conservation, provided access to
his division's files while conservators Gregory Byrne, Thomas Carter,
Toby Raphael, Daniel Riss, Barclay Rogers, and Ronald Sheetz filled
information gaps for the final chapter. Dan Riss also helped locate
references in the division library and called items of potential relevance to
the writer's attention. Exhibits specialist Olin Nave verified some needed
data. HFC kindly granted permission to consult the transcript of an
interview of Dr. and Mrs. Jean C. Harrington by Charles B. Hosmer, Jr.
Among present and former field staff who took pains to answer queries
and supply information, the writer is especially grateful to regional curator
Jonathan W. Bayless; collections manager Barbara L. Beroza, Yosemite
National Park; supervisory museum curator Allen S. Bohnert, Southeast
Archeological Center; museum curator Susan J. Buchel, Nez Perce National
Historical Park; park naturalist Richard Burns, Sequoia National Park;
Robert C. Heyder, superintendent of Mesa Verde National Park; Louise
Hinchliffe, Grand Canyon National Park's librarian; Richard Howard, chief
of interpretation and resource management, and John M. Andresen, ranger,
at Casa Grande Ruins National Monument; museum specialist Kathleen L.
Manscill, Great Smoky Mountains National Park; supervisory park ranger
Betty McSwain, Pipestone National Monument; Betty C. Monkman,
associate curator at the White House; Franklin G. Smith, superintendent of
Chamizal National Memorial; Jack Smith of Mesa Verde National Park;
Roy W. Weaver, superintendent of Nez Perce National Historical Park;
regional curator Pamela B. West, and Peter S. White, University of North
Carolina.
Additional help was received from Virginia L. Cummings and her
colleagues at the Buffalo Museum of Science. National Park Service bureau
historian Barry Mackintosh provided advice and encouragement as he
reviewed and edited chapter drafts. For assistance in obtaining illustrations
we thank Thomas A. DuRant, curator of the NPS historic photographic
collections; Ray Bowers, Carnegie Institution of Washington; Henry Lie,
Center for Conservation and Technical Studies, Harvard University Art
Museums; Martha L. Mitchell, Brown University archivist; and Eliza-
beth L. Robins, registrar, Buffalo Museum of Science. Staff curator
Elizabeth M. Browning prepared the comprehensive index.
Dorothy L. Lewis not only reviewed critically the study in all stages of
the draft but also endured without complaint the demands on disposable
time made by the project through more than a decade.
CHAPTER ONE
1
MUSEUM BEGINNINGS IN THE NATIONAL PARKS
Park museums did not grow from a single root, nor did any central
authority decree their initial establishment. The first ones developed
independently, created by local initiative to meet perceived needs. They
could have received little stimulus through the rudimentary channels of
communication that existed among the parks before creation of the National
Park Service in 1916.
Early park employees had two primary duties that have remained
fundamental: protecting park resources and serving park visitors. Many
visitors were eager to learn and asked questions, often ones lacking ready
answers. Staff members responded to this lively interest as best they could.
Some of them did SO in part by collecting, identifying, labeling, and
exhibiting pertinent specimens. The people who undertook these curatorial
tasks in addition to their regular duties carried on to some extent-perhaps
with little intention-the behind-the-scenes museum functions of recording
and preserving park resources. It soon became apparent that the more
visitors understood about these resources, the more interested they were in
protecting them. This observation added momentum to museum develop-
ment in the parks.
Perhaps none of those who started the first park museums had worked
in museums previously. But museums were part of the intellectual climate
in which they lived. During the first quarter of the twentieth century
museum scientists visited most of the national parks and many of the
national monuments to collect specimens and data. Park workers were
influenced both by these contacts and by public interest in what museums
were doing.
Park museums did not sprout up in a cultural vacuum. They were
engendered by a variety of outside factors, which led to three distinct lines
of progression. The first to be considered took place in natural resource
parks.
Natural Parks
On September 10, 1904, Major John Bigelow, Jr., of the 9th U.S. Cavalry,
acting superintendent of Yosemite National Park, issued his General Orders
No. 46 establishing an arboretum in the park. 1 An arboretum is a form of
museum, making this among the first museums in any national park/Setting
aside between 75 and one hundred acres near the Wawona Hotel, Bigelow
detailed the detachment surgeon, Lieutenant Henry F. Pipes, to lay out
trails, label samples of the various species of trees and flowers with their
common and scientific names, transplant to the arboretum specimens of
2
MUSEUM BEGINNINGS IN THE NATIONAL PARKS
other interesting plants found in the park, and protect the area from misuse.
He also instructed civilian rangers to collect plants from elsewhere in the
park and to look after the arboretum during the winter while the troops
were gone.
Pipes cleared the paths, equipped them with signposts and benches, and
labeled 36 species of plants on one-inch planks painted khaki and nailed to
trees or posts. Time permitted moving in only one transplant. When the
arboretum elicited an inquiry from the Department of the Interior, Bigelow
justified it by stating that an important purpose of the park was "to provide
a great museum of nature for the public free of cost." This concept of the
park itself as a museum is a significant and recurring one. He went on to
express his hope that the arboretum would "some day be supplemented by
a building serving the purpose of a museum and library."2
Bigelow retired from the Army at the end of the 1904 season. He
commended the arboretum to his successor, Captain Harry C. Benson of the
4th Cavalry, but circumstances prevented its continued development. In
1905-06 a boundary change removed the acreage containing the arboretum
from the park and California retroceded Yosemite Valley to the federal
government, making it the park's centerpiece. The arboretum was almost
completely forgotten. After 47 years of total neglect a park ranger retraced
the overgrown paths and located eight of the original labels still in place
and faintly legible. 3
Museum development in Yosemite did not wait that long to resume. In
1914 the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, founded in 1908 at the University
of California in Berkeley, began a study of the mammals, birds, reptiles,
and amphibians of the Yosemite region. Field work for the study continued
until August 1920 with one or more expeditions each year except in
wartime. Museum staff spent 957 man-days collecting 2,001 pages of field
notes and 4,354 specimens, preserving both in the museum as an invaluable
record of park resources.)Yosemite's staff not only helped with logistics but
added useful observations and specimens.
Joseph Grinnell, director of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology and
leader of the Yosemite study, was a museologist and teacher as well as
zoologist. 5 He and his field workers significantly increased local awareness
of museum policies, practices, and opportunities. Stephen T. Mather, busy
with the creation of a national park service, became SO interested that he
contributed personally toward the costs of field studies. 6 Grinnell's
influence fostered the creation of a museum of sorts in the park in 1915. A
number of mounted birds and mammals, and apparently some pressed plants
accompanied by watercolor sketches, were exhibited in the crowded
headquarters building, which also contained a newly established informa-
tion bureau, Because Grinnell taught that "people instinctively want to
know the names of things," each specimen probably had its label.7
CHAPTER ONE
3
Park ranger Forest S. Townsley contributed at least some of the
mounted animals. After previous service in Platt National Park, he joined
the small ranger staff at Yosemite in 1913, became chief ranger in 1916,
and held this position until his death in 1943. Taxidermy was his hobby. He
probably taught himself with the aid of one or more of the excellent
handbooks by museum taxidermists that had sold widely since the 1890s.
No doubt his contacts with Grinnell and other field workers from the
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology helped to intensify his interest and refine
his technique.
If Townsley had a key part in starting the little museum at headquar-
ters, he received reinforcement with the appointment of Ansel F. Hall as
information ranger in 1919. 8 Conditions then favored museum growth. The
National Park Service had begun to function under a policy letter Secretary
of the Interior Franklin K. Lane sent Director Mather on May 13, 1918.
"The educational, as well as the recreational, use of the national parks
"
should be encouraged in every practicable way
it stated in part.
"Museums containing specimens of wild flowers, shrubs, and trees and
mounted animals, birds, and fish native to the parks and other exhibits of
this character, will be established as authorized. "9 This basic statement
also contained the germ of future accession policies limiting the scope of
park museum collections.
Mather himself was seizing upon curatorial measures in his vigorous
campaign to build public support for the national parks As a feature of
the
Fourth National Park Conference in January 1917 he arranged for a special
exhibition at the Smithsonian's National Museum. Forty-five paintings of
park scenes by such artists as Bierstadt, Leigh, Moran, Rungius, and
Twachtman were hung for the opening reception> Most remained on public
display until after President Woodrow Wilson's second inauguration in
March. During the same fiscal year Mather launched an experimental
traveling exhibition intended for display in libraries. It consisted of 24
framed photographs of park scenery packed in two reusable shipping boxes.
Its continuing popularity led the director to request funds to produce and
circulate additional sets. 10
Mather's early annual reports contained enthusiastic references to
museum developments in the parks For Yosemite he proposed to include
ample museum space in the new administration building he was asking
Congress to finance. His 1919 report announced establishment of a National
Parks Educational Committee chaired by the secretary of the Smithsonian
Institution. Its objectives included active promotion of the idea that the
national parks are "museums of Nature in her supreme manifestations," an
echo of Major Bigelow's concept "One of the most important matters to
receive earnest consideration is the early establishment of adequate
museums in every one of our parks in which comprehensive exhibits of the
4
MUSEUM BEGINNINGS IN THE NATIONAL PARKS
flora and fauna, and perhaps the minerals of the region, can be placed,"
Mather declared in his 1920 report. 11
Undergirding such internal factors favorable to park museum develop-
ment was an external one. The American public was on the verge of a
decade of heightened interest in natural history. The nature study move-
ment, which had been growing since the 1890s, was approaching its harvest
time. Excitement over the evolution controversy was also building toward
a climax. Many of the visitors who stopped at the Yosemite information
bureau in 1919 came with curiosity about the plants, animals, and geologic
history of the park already aroused. 12
Ansel Hall probably spent most of his first summer at Yosemite on duty
in the information bureau. If so, he helped register 18,000 campers and
answer questions from an estimated ninety percent of other park visitors.
He was well placed to observe their interests and their reactions to the
natural history specimens on exhibit. The next summer, the new nature
guide service under Harold C. Bryant and Loye H. Miller generated more
visitor questions about natural history. Enid Michael, wife of the Yosemite
postmaster and an able botanist, maintained a large display of cut wild
flowers at the entrance to headquarters. "So great was the interest in the
flower show started last year that it was continued throughout the winter,"
the 1921 Park Service report stated. "Many have spent hours, notebook in
hand, studying the exhibits."13
In 1920 Yosemite could foresee more space for its cramped museum.
It would not have to wait on the long chance that Congress might appropri-
ate the funds requested for a new headquarters building big enough to
contain the exhibits Director Mather had decided to have built at his own
expense a rangers' clubhouse, which would be completed that fall. Then the
bachelor rangers, presumably including Hall, could leave the old structure
that served as their quarters and mess. It had been built about 1899 by
Chris Jorgensen, a successful California artist, as a rustic home and studio.
With moderate alteration the well-sited building could house the museum.
That September Superintendent Washington B. Lewis authorized Hall
to proceed with preparations. The assignment did not include an appreciable
budget, and Hall had to beg, borrow, and scrounge. The exhibit cases were
of necessity homemade. He turned unneeded doors into exhibit tables and
secured the donation of slabs from a lumber company operating near the
park. Meanwhile he launched an aggressive acquisition program, seeking
out appropriate specimens as gifts and loans. This was SO successful that he
could value the collection at more than $30,000 by the time the museum
opened on June 17, 1922. It occupied six rooms designated respectively for
history, ethnology, geology, natural history, botany, and trees of the
region. By the end of the summer it had attracted more than 33,000
CHAPTER ONE
5
visitors. "Although quarters available are wholly inadequate, the museum
has developed into a very creditable one," the superintendent reported. 14
What Hall knew about curatorial work in 1920 had not come from
formal museum training. Grinnell and his field staff had doubtless
familiarized him with their techniques and standards in the preparation and
recording of scientific study specimens. The Museum of Vertebrate
Zoology, however, had little interest in exhibition. Harold Bryant and
others of the nature guide project also knew how to collect, prepare, and
record natural history specimens, but their primary interests lay in person-
to-person educational activities- The character of the museum Hall created
can be judged from contemporary photographs of the exhibit rooms and
published items in Yosemite Nature Notes, an initially mimeographed
periodical the park first issued in 1922 with Hall as editor. 15>
These sources reveal an understandably amateurish installation. The
photographs show a plethora of objects in and atop cases, on and under
open tables, along shelves and window sills, and hung on the walls. The
display methods appear little influenced by concern for the preservation of
the specimens, their didactic use, or their aesthetic effect. The objects were
set out primarily to be looked at by visitors. Labeling appears minimal,
Yosemite National Park Museum, 1922-25. One of the exhibit rooms in the former Chris
Jorgensen studio.
58
PHILANTHROPY AND GUIDANCE, 1924-1934
needed. After approval of the development plan he would present his
tentative requirements for the proposed museum building. The Field
Division would review and refine these, in continued consultation with the
park, and Plans and Design would prepare construction drawings and
specifications. The Field Division of Education stood ready to help the park
prepare and install the exhibits, but the procedure as laid down left
responsibility for exhibit planning unassigned. During 1934 the burden of
this step fell largely on Russell and Schellbach.
Because they could not keep pace with SO many preparators, some
minor chaos was unavoidable Hall felt that every park could use a
topographic model of its territory. With the Fort Hunt laboratory busy
along the same line, the Berkeley shop produced a large relief map of
Mount Desert Island, Maine, and shipped four heavy casts of it across the
continent to Acadia National Park. Acadia unfortunately had no place to use
even one of them. The Field Division also produced a large relief model of
the area immediately east of San Francisco Bay, which had no direct
usefulness in the interpretation of any national park. Questionably justified
as an experiment to help train the map modelers and painters, it was
displayed locally and probably represented an effort to publicize the
operation.
Other measures to take up the slack had more utility. An assembly line
began copying, hand coloring, and binding hundreds of lantern slides for
use by park naturalists, although the diversion of the photographer to take
innumerable promotional pictures of laboratory activities delayed produc-
tion. Less skilled workers made wire tripods in assorted sizes to support
round-bottomed Indian pots, many of which were likely to be exhibited in
the new museums. Other workers stamped out thousands of metal nature
trail labels.
In the midst of getting plans and production into full swing, Hall and
Russell were summoned to Washington where the Educational Advisory
Board was scheduled to consider museum matters. Russell left Berkeley in
mid-February 1934 with instructions to visit en route several of the eastern
parks proposed for new PWA museums. Vicksburg proved surprisingly
attractive. "It would not be an unpleasant job to supervise preparation and
installation of materials if a staff of preparators could be made available,"
he wrote his wife, envisioning the sort of field work he had done in the
Southwest with laboratory support such as was developing in Berkeley. He
noted that the three enthusiastic ECW historical technicians at Vicksburg
had secured CWA workers to help with research but lacked any museum
experience. Its absence showed in the "little tacky museum" they had
assembled as a start. 70
Russell reached Washington on Friday, February 23, in time to spend
the afternoon at Park Service headquarters. Reporting to the Branch of
More About the Centennial
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National Park Service
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Department of the Interior
National Center for Cultural Resources
9 0 4
2
MUSEUM.
MUSEUM CENTENNIAL
History of NPS Museums
Centennial Home Treasures the Nation I Ask the Consenator Museums Home
Other Links:
Early Museum Partners
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Park Staff and Regional Leadership
The NPS Collections
Ideas and Influence
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NPS Museums 1904-2004
Information
The earliest museums in parks were not established by an act of Congress or a
central authority, but grew organically from their context in place. Initially,
Site Credits
they were rudimentary -- a 1904 arboretum in Yosemite, a table of artifacts in
the ruins at Casa Grande by 1905, and even a museum in a tent at Sequoia.
This strong association with place is a characteristic that continues to
distinguish park museums and collections. Stephen T. Mather, the first
director, recognized the power of collections that are preserved and presented
in their original context when, in 1920, he called for "early establishment of
adequate museums in every one of our parks." One of the world's largest
museum systems has grown from these early beginnings. More than 350 park
units preserve over 105 million museum objects, specimens and archival items
to tell the stories of the places where many of the most exciting events of
American history, cultural experiences, and natural phenomena have taken
place.
Although the first rudimentary NPS museums were often the inspiration of a
single park employee, park museums did not sprout in a vacuum. Partnerships
were integral to the early establishment of full-fledged museums in national
parks. The influence of outside factors led to three lines of museum
development -- in natural parks, archeological parks, and historical parks.
Early museum exhibits were part of the campaign to build public support for
the national park idea. In 1917, Director Mather arranged a special paintings
exhibit of park landscapes by artists such as Albert Bierstadt, Thomas Moran,
and J.H. Twachtman at the Smithsonian Institution. Many of these paintings
are now in park collections. At the request of Director Mather, the secretary
of the Smithsonian Institution led an early effort to promote the idea that
national parks themselves are "museums of Nature."
Early Museum Partners
Universities and outside museums conducted research that created some of the
earliest botanical, zoological, and archeological collections from parks.
Historical associations often helped to develop exhibits and furnish historic
structures. As early as 1914 the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of
California, Berkeley, began a study of mammals, birds, reptiles and
http://www.cr.nps.gov/museum/centennial/about.html
11/18/2004
More About the Centennial
Page 2 of 9
amphibians of the Yosemite region. In 1933, Congress established
Morristown National Historical Park, acquiring the Ford Mansion (General
George Washington's headquarters), which the Washington Association of
New Jersey had operated as a museum for the previous 60 years. This
acquisition and a similar arrangement at George Washington Birthplace called
for close collaboration with non-governmental organizations. In partnership
with the American Association of Museums and with funding from the Laura
Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, the NPS developed model park museums in
Yosemite, Grand Canyon, and Yellowstone National Parks in the 1920s.
Museums in these parks are characteristic of developments in parks
established as natural areas.
Early Museums: Natural Parks
By 1915, Yosemite had established a museum in its crowded headquarters
building with exhibits of mounted birds, mammals, pressed plants, and
watercolor sketches. In 1922, the park opened a museum in the former studio
of the artist Chris Jorgensen with rooms devoted to thematic exhibits. A
model museum, supported by the American Association of Museums, opened
in 1926 featuring exhibits on natural history, ethnology, and park history. In
1926 and 1929 Yosemite opened branch museums at Glacier Point and in the
Sierra Club Lodge at Tuolumne Meadows.) The Yosemite Museum
Association, another partnership, was established in 1920 and became the first
of many cooperating associations throughout the National Park Service to
assist park museum operations.
By 1922, Yellowstone had opened a museum in the Bachelor Officers'
Quarters at park headquarters in Mammoth Hot Springs. Exhibits illustrated
botany, geology, paleontology, and zoology. In partnership with the
American Association of Museums, the park opened model branch museums
at Old Faithful, Madison Junction, and Norris Geyser Basin in 1928-1930
In
1931, the Fishing Bridge Museum opened, though it featured graphics more
than specimens in its exhibits.
Grand Canyon opened the Yavapai Point Museum as a model museum that
included an observation station. With support from the American Association
of Museums and the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, John C. Merriam,
the president of the Carnegie Institution, developed the museum. He created a
museum where the canyon was the exhibit and the museum housed viewing
instruments, labels, and guided interpretation. The model was SO successful
that a generation later it was deemed a classic example of interpretive
planning in parks. In 1930, Crater Lake, following this model received one of
the first Congressional appropriations to build a new museum and observation
station, the Sinnott Memorial.
Early Museums: Archeological
Parks
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In 1918, Mesa Verde converted a log cabin ranger station into a museum
exhibiting prehistoric artifacts from the park's cliff dwellings and large
panoramic photographs donated by the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad. By
1925, the park built and opened the first section of a new museum with
donated funds. In the 1930s, funding from the Public Works Administration
supported an extension to the Mesa Verde museum, and constructed numerous
other museums throughout the national park system. In 1923, Casa Grande
moved its nascent museum exhibit in the ruins into a proper museum with
exhibits, a library, maps, an office, and a file/storage room In the 1930s and
1940s Civilian Conservation Corps archeological projects at Ocmulgee,
Yorktown, and Jamestown amassed large collections. In 1938, Colonial
National Historical Park erected a museum at Jamestown that included an
archeological laboratory, collections storage, two small exhibit rooms to orient
visitors to the site, and windows allowing the public to view the storage room
and activities in the laboratory. The 'visible' storage and laboratory exhibit
must have been one of the earliest such examples in the country.
Early Museums: Historical Parks
In 1917, when the National Park Service began operations, the system of 15
national parks and 21 national monuments included only four areas set aside
primarily for their historical significance (excluding archeological parks).
These parks were Gran Quivira, Tumacacori, El Morro, and Sitka. Only one
historical area had a museum before 1930: Gran Quivira began developing a
museum collection in 1925 and by 1929 had opened a modest operation.
In 1933, an executive order transferred to NPS monuments and parks under
the jurisdiction of the War Department, including battlefields such as
Gettysburg, Vicksburg, Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania, Kennesaw
Mountain, Petersburg, and Shiloh; national monuments under the US Forest
Service; as well as, parks and monuments in the National Capital Region. In
1935, Congress passed the Historic Sites Act, directing the NPS to "restore,
reconstruct, rehabilitate, preserve, and maintain historic or prehistoric sites,
buildings, objects, and properties of national historical or archaeological
significance" and "establish and maintain museums in connection therewith."
The number of historic sites in the system, and associated collections,
increased rapidly.
Central Coordination and
Leadership
The independent and geographically dispersed creation of early park museums
soon led to the need to establish standards and coordinate development. In
1929, NPS established a centralized Field Education Division at the
University of California, Berkeley, which covered all park interpreters (i.e.,
guides and educators) and wielded considerable control over each park's
interpretive personnel and program administration. Carl P. Russell took a new
position of "field naturalist-museum advisor" in the Division, becoming the
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first museum expert in a central support function. In 1935 he became chief of
the new Museum Division, which coordinated work at the Field Education
Division, the new Interior Building Museum, a museum exhibits preparation
laboratory at Morristown, New Jersey, (which moved to Ford's Theatre in
1936), and a model laboratory at Fort Hunt, Virginia. His influence led toward
centralized rather than park-based exhibit design and production, which
continues to this day.
The Harpers Ferry Center, established in 1968, in West Virginia, is now the
only servicewide center providing exhibits and interpretive services. These
services include publications, wayside exhibits, audiovisual programs,
museum exhibits, and historic furnishings. The Center also provides
interpretive planning, conservation of objects, audiovisual equipment repair,
graphics research, replacement of wayside exhibits, and the revision and
reprinting of publications. The Denver Service Center, established in 1971,
provides centralized services for designing and constructing museum
facilities.
In 1934, NPS adopted a standard for a Museum Development Plan, closely
linked with the evolving park Master Plan concept, which would guide the
incorporation of museum functions and facilities into a park's total plan and
operations. These plans guided the New Deal public works programs that
built many park museums and exhibits in the 1930s through the early 1940s,
including Chickamauga and Chattanooga, Guilford Courthouse, Shiloh,
Vicksburg, Morristown, Great Smoky Mountains, Hot Springs, Antietam, Fort
McHenry, Mammoth Cave, Acadia, Aztec Ruins, Devils Tower, Scotts Bluff,
Lassen Volcanic, Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, and Rocky
Mountain. A 1939 survey revealed that over the previous four years park
museum operations had grown from 36 to 114 and the aggregate exhibit area
exceeded that of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum in
Washington. Similarly, in 1956, in response to a rapidly growing number of
park visitors, the NPS launched a ten-year program, dubbed Mission 66, to
build museums. The new museums were called 'visitor centers' to emphasize
the multiple visitor services offered.
Apart from planning and development of museum facilities and exhibits, there
was a need to standardize and coordinate other aspects of museum operations.
In 1936, Ned J. Burns, who had coordinated the Morristown laboratory and
production of the Interior Museum exhibits, replaced Russell as acting chief of
the Museum Division, becoming chief in 1939. In 1940, the NPS director
issued guidance to define the proper scope of park museum collections and
required standardized accession and catalog records. By 1941, Burns and his
staff had published the Field Manual for Museums to guide parks in
collections management consistent with professional standards and to
standardize certain procedures and forms. The 1955 passage of the
Management of Museum Properties Act, authorizing donations, bequests,
exchanges, and loans augmented the Historic Sites Act of 1935 in codifying
the NPS museum functions. In 1996, amendments to the museum act
completed the authorities by adding transfer, conveyance, and destruction.
In 1957, NPS issued a Museum Records Handbook to address a problem of
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seriously inadequate museum records in parks. Over the next eleven years
additions to the handbook covered acquisition and care of collections,
furnished historic structures, and exhibit maintenance and repair. It was
renamed the National Park Service Museum Handbook. Ralph Lewis, who
served as chief of the Museum Branch (1954-1964) and chief of the Branch of
Museum Operations (1964-1971), revised and published the handbook in 1976
under the title Manual for Museums. In 1984, NPS returned to the Museum
Handbook title to issue revisions to the record keeping system, eventually
issuing a complete revision and adding a new section on access and use of
collections. To address the need for detailed technical guidance on caring for
collections, NPS initiated the Conserve O Gram series in 1975.
In 1970, the Museum Division moved to Harpers Ferry Center. The Branch of
Museum Operations became the Museum Services Division in 1973. Arthur
C. Allen was chief from 1974 until 1982 when a reorganization placed all
functions, except conservation services, under a newly established Curatorial
Services Division in Washington. Allen and the regional curators had
successfully argued for establishment of a Chief Curator under cultural
resources management on the Director's staff. Ann Hitchcock became Chief
Curator in 1980 and managed the new division.
In the 1980s, the Service began annual assessments of the status of cataloging
and preservation and protection conditions in exhibits and storage areas in
parks. The backlog of collections to be cataloged was far greater than
previously assumed. At the request of Congress, in 1987, the Chief Curator
prepared a plan and cost estimate for improving the situation. Congress
responded by appropriating funds to address the cataloging backlog and
improve preservation and protection conditions that continue to this day.
Concurrently, in 1988, the Service automated its cataloging system, calling it
the Automated National Catalog System (ANCS). A National Catalog office
and vault had been established in 1977 to maintain archival copies of park
museum catalog records and establish basic quality control.
Automation and new funding rapidly accelerated cataloging SO that in two
years, by 1989, parks cataloged more items than had been cataloged in the
previous 85 years. By 1998, ANCS had evolved into a total collections
management system, called ANCS+, that supported not only cataloging, but
also annual reporting of collections statistics, completion of a checklist on
preservation and protection conditions, annual inventories, loans,
deaccessions, conservation records, and housekeeping schedules. With the
advent of the Internet, Websites featuring park collections developed in the
1990s and a Web Catalog was established in 2002. Although work continues
to reduce the backlog, today the collections include 50 million cataloged
items.
Park Staff and Regional Leadership
Except for early efforts to centrally control park interpretive and museum
staff, park superintendents have been accountable for park museum
collections. The duties of park curators have focused on collections
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management, rather than connoisseurship. An ongoing problem has been the
lack of staff with curatorial skills, especially when museum collections
management was just one of many duties assigned to a park employee. To
help address this problem, a museum methods course was first offered in 1948
and continued to be offered in most years through the mid-1990s. As of 2003,
over 700 NPS employees have museum management responsibilities. Over
50 percent have other primary duties.
As the NPS grew, regional offices formed and took a leadership role in
overseeing park museums operations. In 1957, as part of a cataloging
initiative, the regions recruited regional curators to assist parks. Eventually,
these positions became permanent, with occasional lapses. These experienced
curators were especially critical for parks that lacked full-time curators. The
regional curators, meeting in committees with park curators and curators in
headquarters, played a critical role in ensuring that policies, procedures and
servicewide initiatives addressed park museum collections management
needs. In 1995, the regional curators, chief curator, and representatives from
centers formed the Museum Management Program Council, an advisory group
to the associate director for cultural resources, in headquarters.
Archeological centers, and more recently museum services centers, played
another critical role in caring for park collections. In 1952, an archeological
center was established in Globe, Arizona, to provide ruins stabilization in the
Southwest and museum management support. The Southeast Archeological
Center has its origins at Ocmulgee in 1966, and serves similar purposes.
Subsequently, the Midwest Archeological Center, National Capital Region
Museum Resource Center, and Northeast Museum Services Center were
established.
The NPS Collections
Museum collections from over 350 units of the national park system are
maintained in parks, at six NPS cultural resource centers, and at over 450 non-
Federal repositories. These collections include 34.5 million archeological, 3.4
million historical, 1.9 million biological, 290,000 paleontological, 69,000
geological, and 28,000 ethnological objects and specimens, and 65.1 million
archival and manuscript items. The collections include items ranging from
historic furnishings in the home of John Adams, flags that flew over Fort
Sumter, Thomas Edison's handwritten notes on inventions, to botanical
specimens from Yosemite and archeological items from Mesa Verde. These
museum collections are important not only in their own right, but also because
of their direct association with the nationally significant sites in the national
park system.
The parks that were established primarily for their natural history developed
scientific collections early. These nonrenewable collections document change
in conditions, species, and habitat over time. For example, the Yosemite
collection has 50 specimens of the foothill yellow-legged frog, Rana boylii,
which the Yosemite Field School collected in the 1930s. This frog is now
absent from the region. The decline of frog and toad fauna is among the most
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serious and urgent conservation concerns in the Yosemite area. In Everglades,
a Florida cougar skull, collected solely for exhibit, later became important for
its scientific value in helping to resolve taxonomic questions regarding the
description of the subspecies Felis concolor coryi.
Parks encourage and permit scientists to collect specimens, which, if
permanently retained and not consumed in analysis, become museum
specimens. Prior to 1984, many of these collections went to universities and
non-NPS museums for storage, without adequate tracking by NPS. New
procedures, introduced in 1984, require that NPS catalog the specimens and
manage them in NPS facilities, or place them on loan to non-NPS partners. A
servicewide initiative that began in 1999 to inventory natural resources in all
parks accelerated the growth of natural history collections. In spite of this
growth, biological, paleontological, and geological collections represent only
two percent of the total NPS museum collections.
By contrast, archeological collections, which also originate within the
boundaries of parks, represent 33 percent of all NPS collections. Sometimes
these collections are made before a park is established and they go to other
museums. For example, the artifacts found by the Swedish scientist Gustaf
Nordenskiold in 1891 at Mesa Verde are in the National Museum of Finland.
More often, NPS archeologists collect the artifacts as part of park-sponsored
research or recovery and mitigation projects prior to construction or other
actions that would destroy the site. Nearly every park has at least some
archeological collections from within its boundaries. Collections may be
"prehistoric" (from a cultural group without written history), such as those at
Bandelier, or "historic," such as those at Jamestown, or a mixture, such as
those at Pecos, where both prehistoric Native American and Spanish
occupations were present.
Some historic collections are acquired nearly complete as part of the
acquisition of property for the park. For example, in 1946, when the Adams
Memorial Society, donated the property for Adams National Historical Park,
the home and library came fully furnished by the generations of the Adams
family that had occupied the site for 139 years. Other situations require the
park to research and identify those collections that should be acquired. For
years Martin Van Buren National Historic Site has tried to acquire the dining
table that the President used in his home in Kinderhook, New York. The park
had made a replica, but efforts to acquire the original at auction have been
unsuccessful to date. Some historical objects are mundane, such as the
kitchen tools at Grant-Kohrs Ranch; others have intrinsic national
significance, such as the derringer that John Wilkes Booth used to shoot
President Abraham Lincoln and the Lincoln cane that Mary Todd Lincoln
gave to Frederick Douglass after the President's death. Yet, all are valued for
their connection to the place where important events or cultural experiences
occurred.
Ethnological collections include items acquired from living cultural groups,
primarily Native Americans. In 1976, the Jackson Hole Preserve donated the
Vernon Collection of over 1,400 items from many tribes to Grand Teton
National Park. By contrast, collections at Nez Perce National Historical Park,
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authorized in 1965, focus on a single cultural group.
Early in its history, the NPS sought to place archival collections related to
parks in other institutions. This approach gradually changed. The largest
archival collection is at Edison, which includes business records, family
papers, laboratory notebooks on experimental work, audio recordings,
photographs, and motion pictures mostly donated by Edison businesses and
the family between 1956 and 1968. Another extraordinary archival collection
is devoted to the photographs, landscape plans, and drawings associated with
Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site, established in 1979. The
archival collections at most parks include the records associated with resource
management, including archeology, the sciences, and historic structure
preservation. Archival collections are estimated to represent over 60 percent
of the NPS collections, though more than half remain to be described and
cataloged.
Ideas and Influence
The challenges of acquiring, documenting, preserving, interpreting, and
providing access to more than 105 million items in over 350 parks in the
national park system have called for big scale solutions to local problems.
New developments in national park museums have often had a ripple effect in
the museum world. For example, parks and other museums have benefited
from the procedures, guidelines, and automated systems that NPS has
developed. The NPS Museum Handbook (and its precursors, the Field
Manual for Museums and Manual for Museums) and Conserve O Gram have
been adapted for use by other museums, cited by the AAM in its reference
services, and used in museology programs. They have been sold through the
Government Printing Office and more recent publications have been made
available on the Web. When the Automated National Catalog System was
developed for park museums, many small to mid-size museums adopted it as
well. The current customized off-the-shelf system is commercially available
to other museums as the "National Park Service" version. The Exhibit
Conservation Guideline CD-ROM, with over 1,500 copies distributed, is an
idea that took hold quickly in the 1990s and remains popular. The 'visitor
center' concept, pioneered by the National Park Service in the 1950s is now
widespread in parks at local, state, and national levels. NPS has exported
ideas abroad, including interpretive planning concepts, the park brochure grid
format, and the integration of exhibits and interpretive media in a visitor
center. The parks, and park museum collections, have been a testing ground
for preservation ideas and strategies.
Read More
Ann Hitchcock
Chief Curator
April 2004
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