New Brunswick Museum

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New Brunswick Museum
File:Saint John, NB Museum, entrance.jpg
Established 1842
Location Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Type provincial museum
Website www.nbm-mnb.ca

The New Brunswick Museum, located in Saint John, New Brunswick, is Canada's oldest continuing museum[citation needed]. The New Brunswick Museum was officially incorporated as the "Provincial Museum" in 1929 and received its current name in 1930, but its history goes back much further. Its lineage can be traced back another eighty-eight years to 1842 and to the work of Dr. Abraham Gesner.

History

File:NBMuseumSaintJohn2007.jpg
The New Brunswick Museum was opened on Douglas Avenue, Saint John, New Brunswick in 1934, the 150th anniversary of the founding of the province. In 1996, exhibitions were moved to Market Square. The Douglas Avenue facility now houses collections, laboratories, administration and the archives and research library.

On 5 April 1842 Abraham Gesner opened the Museum of Natural History, the precursor of the New Brunswick Museum, in one room of the Mechanics' Institute on Carleton Street, in Saint John. Unfortunately, income from his newly founded museum was not enough to solve Gesner's financial problems[clarification needed]. In 1843, his collection passed on to his creditors who, in turn, donated it to the Saint John Mechanics' Institute.

Renamed the Mechanics' Institute Museum in 1846, an annual report[by whom?] dating from 1863 described it as, "a large and valuable collection of minerals, a great variety of zoological specimens, and many Chinese, Indian and other curiosities [that] frequently receives additions from foreign sea captains and others who get into their possession foreign articles of an attractive description."

When the Mechanics' Institute closed in 1890, the Natural History Society of New Brunswick acquired the collection and the museum was moved, first to the then new Market Building then, in 1906, to 72 Union Street. Under the care of its curator and later director, the entomologist Dr. William McIntosh, the museum's collections and activities expanded until a new building was essential. In 1934 a new Provincial museum facility on Douglas Avenue was officially opened by Prime Minister R.B. Bennett.

As of 1942, the collections, building and properties of the museum officially became the property of the people of New Brunswick. Today a Provincial institution funded by the Province of New Brunswick, the New Brunswick Museum continues to collect, preserve, study and exhibit the Province's natural and cultural heritage. As well as having a remarkable natural sciences collection, the museum has expanded to include one of the largest collections of 19th century decorative arts and Canadiana in the Atlantic Provinces.

By 1992, the museum had outgrown its Douglas Avenue location, and plans were made to develop new exhibition galleries in a central Saint John location. In April 1996, the New Brunswick Museum officially opened at Market Square in leased space in uptown Saint John (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.). The Market Square Exhibition Centre offers three floors and 60,000 square feet (6,000 m2) of exhibition spaces and a wide range of public programs. The Collections Centre, the Archives and Research Library, and the Head Office continue to be situated at the Douglas Avenue location.

Affiliations

The museum is affiliated with the CMA, the CHIN, and the Virtual Museum of Canada.

References

This art museum has paintings by such British painters as George Romney, William Knell, Henry Aiken, and John Rising from the 18th and 19th centuries. It has Canadian paintings by Cornelis Kreighoff, Maurice Cullen, Clarence Gagnon, Arthur Lismer, Lawren Harris, Jack Humphreys, Molly Bobak, and Francine Ward-Francis. It has paintings of ships by William Clark, Eduard Adam, and Charles Keith Miller. It has Contemporary sculpture by John Hooper and a large collection of Inuit soapstone figures.

External links