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Minnesota History Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Minnesota History Center
Map
Established1992
Location345 W. Kellogg Boulevard
Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States
Coordinates44°56′59″N 93°6′20″W / 44.94972°N 93.10556°W / 44.94972; -93.10556
TypeHistorical society
DirectorKent Whitworth
Public transit accessBus: 16, 21, 94
Websitewww.mnhs.org

The Minnesota History Center is a museum and library that serves as the headquarters of the Minnesota Historical Society. It is near downtown Saint Paul, Minnesota.

The Minnesota History Center is on Kellogg Boulevard, between the Mississippi River and the Minnesota State Capitol.[1] Before this building was built in 1992, the Minnesota Historical Society (MNHS) occupied what is now the Minnesota Judicial Center, originally built for the Society in 1917. Before that, MNHS was housed in the basement of the State Capitol.[2]

The center hosts concerts, dance performances, lectures, conferences, meetings, dinners, political campaign events, memorial services, receptions, parties, and weddings; as many as 75,000 schoolchildren visit the History Center every year.[citation needed]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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Transcription

[ Music ] [ Male Narrator ] Are you ready? [ Man 1 ] 3, 2, 1. [ Narrator ] To travel back in time? To visit? [ Man 2 ] Welcome to my tipi. [ Narrator ] Touch. [ Girl 1 ] Oh wow, this is so cool. [ Narrator ] Experience the past. [ Man 3 ] The White House announces Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. [ Narrator ] That's exactly what you'll do at the Minnesota History Center. Travel back to Minnesota's prairie, cities, forests, and mines. [ Girl 2 ] Hurry get out! Get out! [ Boom ] [ Narrator ] You'll relive a tornado that tore through a Minnesota town. [ Man 4 ] We interrupt this program with a weather advisory. [ Narrator ] And meet Minnesota solders who risked their lives for freedom. [ Explosion ] [ Gun shots ] [ Explosion ] [ Narrator ] These are true stories. [ Girl 1 ] Woah! Look at the bus. [ Narrator ] That invite you to explore. [ Boy 1 ] Woah. [ Narrator ] Touch. [ Boy 2 ] Go, go, go, go. [ Narrator ] Play. [ Students ] Go, go, go, go. [ Narrator ] And learn. [ Man 5 ] Maybe one of you gentleman can figure this out. [ Girl 3 ] It's easier to learn here because then you get to interact with it and you guys make it fun for us to learn. [ Narrator ] Each room will take you to a place you've never been before. [ Clapping ] [ Narrator ] Like a St. Paul home where different families lived throughout the years. [ Woman 1 ] She set the table, you know, very fancy. [ Narrator ] Or a mud home from the 1870's. [ Boy 3 ] There's not enough room for 7 people. [ Boy 4 ] They cut the ground in rectangles and stacked them like an igloo. [ Narrator ] Why did some Minnesotans' make their homes out of mud long ago? And find out the answer when you visit the Minnesota History Center. [ Boy 5 ] Make sure you get everything in. [ Music ]

Architecture

The Minneapolis architectural firm of Hammel Green and Abrahamson (HGA) designed the History Center's floor plan and exterior. HGA looked to Fort Snelling, the St. Paul's Cathedral and the Minnesota State Capitol for inspiration. One member of the History Center Planning Committee said, "We have envisioned a place that draws the public in, fires the imagination, and responds to its hunger for an understanding of the past. We have envisioned a building alive with people from morning until far into the evening...a vital cultural and educational center."[citation needed]

After ten years of planning and nearly three years of construction, The History Center opened in October 1992. The building features a central dome with two bordering wings, creating an L-shaped design. The north facade faces the Capitol, and the southeast facade overlooks a large lawn and terrace area. Bronze doors admit visitors into the center's main entrance, on the west wall.

The construction budget for the History Center included funds from a Percent for Art program that included three integrated artworks: Charm Bracelet lies on the floor of the first-story rotunda. This project, sculpted by James Casebere, depicts a broken piece of jewelry in which each of ten "charms" represents an important aspect of Minnesota: a tractor (agriculture); a printer's ink roller (civic society and free speech); a tepee (the Dakota tribe); a mill building (lumbering and flour-milling); a house (family); a power plant (technology and industry); a turtle, bear and fish (nature, outdoor recreation, and Ojibwe totems of healing, defense and learning); and a whooping crane (lost wilderness and a metaphor for history). The entrance of the History Center includes glass etchings by Brit Bunkley above the John Ireland and Kellogg Boulevard entrances and the courtyard doors. He created a "system of icons" of sandblasted panels with multidimensional iconic imagery deeply etched onto the thick glass surfaces. Andrew Leicester created Minnesota Profiles, terra cotta columns "marking the edge of where Summit Avenue once crossed what is today’s History Center courtyard". Each column represents a native tree that also include sculpted profiles of 140 volunteers.[3]

The Minnesota History Center is one of the 26 Minnesota Historical Society sites and is home to the Minnesota Historical Society headquarters, the Society's collections, an expansive library, and 44,000 square feet (4,100 m2) of museum gallery space. The museum showcases interactive in-house-developed and traveling exhibits, as well as historical programming and lectures. The center also contains conference rooms, the 3M Auditorium, Café Minnesota, two museum gift shops and 12,800 square feet (1,190 m2) of classroom space.[2]

More than half of the 427,000 square feet (39,700 m2) building is underground,[4] much of which is used for storage. The Minnesota History Center possesses over 1 million artifacts, including archaeological objects, books, photographs, maps, paintings, prints, drawings, manuscripts, government records, newspapers and periodicals. Such artifacts are stored in the 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) of storage space available in the center. In this storage space, the shelves reach heights over 25 feet.[5] The center also has a conservation laboratory, where conservators repair, stabilize, and maintain the Society's thousands of valuable objects.

Gale Family Library

The Gale Family Library on the second floor of the History Center offers resources for MNHS members and guests. Two rooms, the Weyerhaeuser Reference Room and the Ronald M. Hubbs Microfilm Reading Room, make up the library area. The library often hosts classes on historical and genealogical research.[6]

References

Citations
  1. ^ Horrigan 1996, p. 2.
  2. ^ a b "About the History Center".
  3. ^ "Art and Architecture". Minnesota Historical Society. Retrieved September 29, 2020.
  4. ^ Horrigan 1996, p. 9.
  5. ^ Horrigan 1996, p. 30.
  6. ^ "Library | Library Home". sites.mnhs.org. Retrieved September 23, 2016.
Works cited
  • Horrigan, Brian (1996), Minnesota History Center, Minnesota Historical Society Press

External links

This page was last edited on 15 October 2023, at 03:21
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