Kenosha Public Museum
The Kenosha Public Museum
The Kenosha Public Museum, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, features
displays of fine art, decorative art, and natural science specimens. Founded in
1933, and opened to the public in 1936 the museum currently is located at
Kenosha's lakefront. Aside from the collections, the Museum also hosts many
classes, changing exhibits, workshops and events throughout the year.
One major exhibit at the Kenosha Public Museum is The Wisconsin Story, which
features the Schaefer mammoth remains and a replica of the Hebior mammoth. The
Schaefer mammoth is in the collections of the Kenosha Public Museum along with
two other mammoths from Mud Lake and the Fenske site. The Schaefer and Hebior
mammoths represents the earliest known interaction between man and mammoth, and
were excavated by a team of professional archaeologists from all over the state
of Wisconsin during the years 1992-1994. The actual Hebior mammoth remains are
in the collection of the Milwaukee Public Museum, however, the Friends of the
Museum provided the funds for the Kenosha Public Museum to acquire a replica.
The Wisconsin Story exhibit also features Native Americans through time, the
coming of Europeans to Wisconsin and a Potawatomi village in four seasons.
The Kenosha Public Museum was first located at 5608 10th Avenue, in a one-story
Beaux Arts building. This building, designed by James Knox Taylor, was completed
between 1908 and 1910. Interestingly, the building was then moved, one foot at a
time, across the street to its current location. Originally, the building served
as the city's Post Office, but in 1933, it became the Kenosha Public Museum.
In 2001, the museum moved to a 45,000-square-foot (4,200 m2) new building
designed by Engberg Anderson. The architectural design is meant to reflect the
shape of the glaciers that shaped the surrounding countryside. The Kenosha
Public Museum is part of a museum system also including the Dinosaur Discovery
Museum and the Civil War Museum. The museums are accredited by the American
Alliance of Museums, certified Travel Green Wisconsin destinations and are an
affiliate within the Smithsonian Affiliations program.
Text from Wikipedia
Ice Age
butchering the mammoth
fishing
basket making
totem pole