Museum of American Heritage

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Museum of American Heritage
File:Lego Pneumatic Adding Machine.jpg
Jim's adding machine.

Part of the Bay Area LEGO Users Group display at the Museum of American Heritage in Palo Alto, CA. The display will be on public view until January 6, 2008.

Photos by Bill Ward.
Established 1990
Location 351 Homer Avenue
Palo Alto, California
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Visitors 10,000+
Director Sandra Roorda
Website Official website

The Museum of American Heritage (MOAH) is a museum[1][2][3] in Palo Alto, California. It is dedicated to the preservation and display of electrical and mechanical technology and inventions from the 1750s through the 1950s. The museum has a large collection of artifacts that are generally not accessible to the public. Selections from the collection are displayed in a historic house at 351 Homer Ave, Palo Alto, California.[4] MOAH is a 501 (c) (3) non profit organization[5] and a member of the American Alliance of Museums.[6]

History

The Museum of American Heritage was originally opened to the public on September 20, 1990. Prior to that it was the private collection of Frank Livermore (1919-2000).[7][8] The museum was originally located at 275 Alma St., Palo Alto (9/1990 through 11/1994). From 1995 through 1998 the museum occupied a former BMW dealership at 3401 El Camino Real in Palo Alto. The current location on Homer Ave., in Palo Alto, was opened to the public in 1998.[9]

At the time of his death, the Livermore Collection of consisted of approximately 1,000 artifacts. A trust was established by Frank Livermore to preserve and display this collection to the public.[10] As of 2013, the MOAH collection has over 5,000 accessioned artifacts.

Exhibits

Five rooms containing rotating exhibits that change several times per year.[3] Exhibits contain artifacts selected from the museum collection and/or from local collectors. Prior exhibits include:

  • Television, A History (Fall, 2013)
  • Inventing the 20th Century (Summer, 2012)
  • Antique Toys, 1870-1930 (Winter, 2010)

Permanent exhibits[4] in six rooms of the Williams House include:

  • An early 20th Century Kitchen
  • A 1920s General Store displaying the contents from a single Chicago store[11]
  • Functioning Print Shop with 4 letterpress printers and one Intertype printer (Intertype Corporation)[12]
  • Early Automobile Garage and Workshop

Collection

The museum has a mission to collect and preserve artifacts that are electrical and mechanical in nature and were invented or built from the 1750s through the 1950s. The museum accepts donated artifacts that meet this criteria for inclusion in the collection.

The MOAH collection is housed in a remote warehouse and is seldom open to the public. Categories typical to the collection include: sewing machines, mechanical typewriters, cameras, radios and televisions, clocks, toys, adding machines and mechanical calculators, and kitchen appliances. There are over 5,000 accessioned artifacts in the collection and many more that are display items, extras, or permanent loan items. It is reported to be one of the largest collections of its kind in the United States.[3]

Items from the collection are used for MOAH permanent and rotating exhibits. Other museums and institutions are able to borrow items from the MOAH collection for their exhibits or other displays. Organizations that have borrowed exhibit materials from MOAH include the San Francisco International Airport museum, the Los Altos History Museum, San Jose State University theater department, and the Stanford Federal Credit union.

The museum collection database is currently only accessible during public hours at the main museum location in Palo Alto.

House

The Museum of American Heritage is currently open to the public in the Williams House on Homer Ave. in Palo Alto. This house was custom built in 1907 by Dr. Thomas Williams for his residence and private medical practice. Dr Williams is noted for having opened the first doctors office in the Palo Alto area.[13] The house is a Tudor Revival design, and the architect was Ernest Coxhead. The house was owned by the Williams family until the death of the last living daughter of Thomas and Dora Williams. The house was bequeathed to the city of Palo Alto to be used for the community benefit.[14]

In 1997, Palo Alto asked for request for proposals of how to use the property. The city selected the Museum of American Heritage proposal, and after a significant restoration the museum opened its doors to public in 1998.[15] Significant features of the Williams house include:

  • Two story portion for the family living quarters with extensive built in cabinetry (the upstairs is currently not open to the general public)
  • Single story section designed specifically for Dr. Williams medical practice including an operating room with a large skylight for illumination
  • A large detached garage which housed one of the first automobiles in Palo Alto (this building was substantially altered during the 1997 restoration).

The Williams house is currently on the Palo Alto Historic Inventories list as a Class 2 Palo Alto Historic building.[16] The building behind the main house (labeled "Livermore Learning Center") is a new structure and is located where a small family orchard was originally located.

The Williams House Gardens

Early photographs of the Williams' property[17] show an open vista with an unobstructed view of the house, the beginnings of landscape, and only a few native trees. But Dora Williams' interest and proficiency in gardening developed along with her garden until it reached a height of complexity in the 1920s and 1930s.[18] Her extensive notes on the garden document the garden development over the years, and have allowed the garden to be restored to its original state.

Unlike many public specimen gardens, this garden was (and remains) representative of an early 20th Century residential landscape. Featuring "outdoor rooms" delineated by rock walls and border plantings and punctuated by ornamental fountains and ponds.[17]

At the same time the garden area served the more utilitarian functions required by the Williams family, such as a vegetable garden, a medicinal plants garden, clothes drying, and composting. It is attributed to be the only historically preserved landscape in Palo Alto, and one of the few in California.[18] The Museum of American Heritage is currently preserving the Williams House Garden.

See also

References

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External links