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== [[General Introduction]]==
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[[Image:Msm interior museum 12079506 898929033529345 1093773669658577739 n.jpg|thumb|400px]]
[[Image:Msminterior07duo.jpg|thumb|The main exhibition space and research areas of the Museum as they appeared in 2007.]]
 
  
<blockquote>''A German critic, W. Bürger [writes] "Our Museums...are veritable graveyard-yards in which have been heaped up, with a tumulour-like promiscuousness, the remains which have been carried thither...all are hung pell-mell upon the walls of some noncommittal gallery—a kind of posthumous asylum, where a people, no longer capable of producing...come to admire this magnificent gallery of débris.”'' —G. Brown Goode, ''Museums of the Future,'' Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 1891: p. 427 </blockquote>
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[[Image:Photo book 2010 wrong side of the tracksP1040849.jpg|thumb|400px|The Main Street Museum and the famous Underpass—charming example of the vernacular architecture of White River Junction, Vermont.]]
  
[[Image:Firestationfront2007SM.jpg|thumb]]
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[[Image:Entrancesign08.jpg|thumb]]
The Collection of artifacts at the Main Street Museum is a unique experiment in material culture studies, consisting of objects of varied origins—man-made (or historical) and biological, botanical and mineralogical.
 
  
The Museum forges nimble links and reflects meanings from object to object, from object to viewer, and from the viewer back to the object again. Our website features “wiki” software and includes the catalog of our varied holdings in a manner that is fully accessible and modifiable electronically.  
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==What We Are and What We Do==
 +
The Main Street Museum is a small, public collection of curiosities and artifacts, each one is significant and each one tells some kind of story about human beings and the complex, sometimes baffling universe we are a part of. The aim of the Museum is the study of an accumulation of small details, cultivating among both specialists, and among the general public, a sense of wonder at the big questions that arise when we study and categorize objects and our reactions to them. We believe that our relationships with objects are more complex than usually acknowledged—indeed sometimes far more complex.  
  
Assigning nuanced values to artifacts is increasingly difficult in the environment of most major collecting institutions. The neutrality of theoretical systems utilized by any museum is currently being called into question. As a small independent repository the Main Street Museum has the flexibility—indeed the mandate—to examine the layered and ever changing meanings of objects and their relationships to their surroundings. As the uses for objects are more or less continuously in flux, we analyze these uses through traditional disciplines (art historical, scientific and qualitative methods), but also through psychological analysis as well. Our emotional relationships with objects are formed circuitously. Therefore the meaning of objects is unlocked only through similar, indirect means. [''[[General Introduction|learn less]]'']
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Located in central Vermont, our collections are accessible by visiting us in person, or through our online [[Catawiki|"wiki" style catalog]]. At present we are open only by appointment, however. As well as studying and cataloging objects we present live music, glass lantern slide presentations, vaudeville shows, films and ''Spectacles'' to the public.
  
[[Image:Lenasinterior94.jpg|thumb|The interior of the Museum as it appeared in 1994, housed in the downtown's old bowling alleys and silent picture movie-house.]]
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==[[Rent the Museum!|Rent the Museum! Click here for more info!]]==
  
[[Image:Msminterior00.jpg|thumb|The Museum interior in transition, 2000, c.e.]]
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==Shoppe with Us! [[The Museum Gifte Shoppe]]==
==[[History]]==
 
The museum opened on South Main Street in 1992 and immediately attracted a broad cross-section of citizenry: academics, art professionals, musicians, politicians, journalists, the under-employed, habitual evil-livers, and also quite ordinary people (it might as well be admitted, that many in all of these categories were my own blood relatives). Here then was the first site for the museum. The building was owned at the time by a notorious local slum-lord, but it had been the former home of a renown local restaurant, “Lena’s Lunch”. It was a narrow storefront space which had been a public space for over 100 years—a silent picture theater, indoor miniature golf, and a bowling alley, also a restaurant with transvestite waitresses—yes, submarine sandwiches by day and “Judy” and “Barbara” by night. There ought to be a plaque. Here Elvis impersonators and High-Art all enjoyed equal admiration. (or, High-Art claimed as much admiration as it can, when competing with Elvis impersonators.) Our home was directly across the street from an American Legion Hall; and there are no better critics. They would be completely and utterly potted every night. They withheld nothing. [[History|[''learn less'']]]
 
  
[[Image:FirestationcartooonSM.jpg|thumb]]
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The Museum Gift Shoppe is currently closing out its inventory. We still feature "[[White River Junction; Its not so Bad!]]" [[T-shirts|t-shirts]], mugs, souvenirs, a wide variety of books on museums and museum-y things, our own booklets—hand-stitched, gumball machine charms and wonky gifts that "must be seen to be believed!"
  
==[[Publicity|Recent News]]==
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==Our Reading Room!==
'''our latest pr...''' [[Publicity|''learn less'']]
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[[Image:Seamonstersquidsailor20000.jpg|thumb|Monsters! Monsters are cool!]]
 +
Come see our books!
  
==[[Categories]] including ''Series'' and ''Subseries'' and ''Vinculum Categories''==
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==Covid-19 Hours==
 +
The Museum is currently under construction and reorganization during our shut-down of large public events. We will be conducting outdoor projections and "spasms" on the first Fridays in the summer months of 2021. Indoor events will resume before the Fall. Email info@mainstreetmuseum.org or text 8(zero)2.356.2776 before your visit. —Thanks!
  
Categories are often both overlapping (vinculum) and mutable. At the Main Street Museum they include, but are not limited to: Flora; Fauna; Exotica (geographically diverse objects); Shoes (and Tiny Shoes); Fiber, Textiles and Costumes; Tangled Things; Objects Associated with Famous People; Round Things; Objects with Orifices; Bad Art; Bad Craft; Recreated Artifacts Refused by Dartmouth Realia; Amulets and Sacred Objects; Judæica; Vermontiana; Relics from the Civil War/War Between the States; and Unidentified Mammals or “Flocked Pets.
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==Admission==
 +
The Museum suggests a $5 to $50 donation for visiting our collections. Volunteer for an hour at the Museum and receive free admittance to the Museum!
 +
<br>Guided tours of the Museum and its collections include a demonstration of the Museum's 1930 Æolian Stroud player piano and 1926 Orthophonic Victrola.
  
[[Image:Flockeddog.jpg|thumb|What is he thinking about, right now?]]
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==Directions and Parking==
==Main Street Museum Catalog of Artifacts (Catawiki)==
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Museum Headquarters are located at 58 Bridge Street in downtown White River Junction, adjacent to Railroad Row, between the railroad underpass and the White River. '''Parking for Museum patrons is available on the street nearby on "Railroad Row" or in the Courthouse/Depot Parking lot.'''
  
==[[Objects as Evidence of Human Culture]]==
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==[[Volunteer at the Museum]]==
  
===Artifacts as Evidence of Religion; [[Comparitive Religious Studies]]===
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The Main Street Museum is a great place to visit, and a great place to volunteer.
*[[Judaica]]
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You can do everything from museum sitting, to helping out with arranging and maintaining displays, researching and writing museum labels, and, eventually, helping with refreshments or setting up for special events like concerts and First Fridays open house nights.
*[[Relics]]
 
**[[Secular Relics]]
 
***[[Pieces of Wood]]
 
**[[Religious Relics]]
 
***[[Associated Relics]]
 
***[[Sacred Utensils]]; [[Sacred Utensils|Consecrated Objects]] designed for ceremonial Use
 
  
===[[The American Indian]]===
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E-mail us at info@mainstreetmuseum.org for more information, or call us at 8(zero)2-356-2776.
  
===[[Evidences of Deconstruction in the Building and Construction Trades]]===
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==[[What's Goin On?!|Upcoming Events]]!==
  
===[[Geographically Significant Artifacts]]===
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[[What's Goin On?!|Check out our full schedule here!]]
*[[The Americas]]
 
*[[Asia]]
 
*[[Europe]]
 
*[[Oceana]]
 
  
[[Image:Glassmayflower.jpg|thumb|Tumbler which may—or may not—have come to America on the Mayflower.]]
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==[[Catawiki]]==
===[[Historic Artifacts]]===
 
*[[Household Items]]
 
*[[Objects Associated with Vermont or New Hampshire Artists]]
 
*[[Things, or Fragments of Things Once Owned by, or Associated with, Notable People—Particularly Notable Vermonters]]
 
*[[Objets d'Art]]
 
*[[Pictures]]
 
*[[Recreated Artifacts Denied by Dartmouth Realia]]
 
  
[[Image:Brick.jpg|thumb]]
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The Main Street Museum's [[Catawiki]] is a unique digital initiative in material culture studies utilizing open-source code to describe the artifacts in our collections and to create a completely fluid, adaptive taxonomic structure for their interpretation. The Catawiki uses the same "wiki" code utilized by "Wikipedia" and is able to be modified by users from any internet access point. The categories currently acting as a organizational foundation for these structures are:
  
===[[Man-made Minerals]]===
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*[[Objects as Evidence of Human Culture]], for instance: Pet Toys; Geographically or Historically Significant Items (Relics); Manuscripts; Art; Military History; Textiles and Clothing; Shoes; and "Things, or Fragments of Things Once Owned by, or Associated with, Notable People Particularly Notable Vermonters".
===[[Manuscripts]] and [[Journals]]===
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*[[Biology]]: Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects, including
*[[The Heather Collection]]
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**[[Flora]]: "The Invasive and Native Species of Windsor County" for instance, or "Dried Roses from Robert Todd Lincolns House in Manchester, Vermont" and "[[Camellia Blossoms and Leaves from the Varina and Jefferson Davis Memorial]]".
 +
**[[Fauna]] includes: Homo-sapiens; White-tailed Deer and Other Mammalia; Reptiles; Birds; [[Entomology]] (Insects); Corals; Flocked Pets; Other, or Unidentified Species; etc.
 +
*Inanimate, or Apparently Inanimate Objects, or Boxes of Rocks including Minerals, Man-made Minerals, Silt from the 1927 Flood, Round and/or Rusted Things.
 +
*And, of course, Miscellaneous or [[Other Things]].
 +
*[[Vinculum Categories|Vinculum (or Overlapping) Categories]] can be accessed from the sidebar to the left and include: Carbon; Color as a Hysterical Reaction; Cute Things; Flocking; Objects Chewed by Pets; Teeth, More Teeth, Things with Nail-holes; "Things Made from Animals or Parts of Animals" and Tramps and Hobos.
  
===[[Shoes]]===
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==[[Publicity]] and [[Press Clippings]]==
===[[Tramps]]===
 
  
===[[The Work-day World of White River Junction]]===
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Read what we write about ourselves. Read what others write about us.
*[[Drugs]]
 
*[[Food]]
 
*[[Tools]]
 
  
==[[Pet Toys]]==
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===[[Testimonials]]===
*[[Cats]]
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<blockquote>The Main Street Museum—White River Junction's answer to the Library of Congress. <br/>—'''Peter Welch''', U. S. House of Representatives, 2007.</blockquote>
*[[Dogs]]
 
  
==Two Dimensional Evidence [[Paper]]; [[Archive]] Collections==
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<blockquote>It is only due to organizations such as yours that the important works of our Country are brought to the attention of the public. <br/>—'''—Marie Reilly''', Museum of Bad Art, Dedham, 1998. [[Testimonials|''learn less...!'']]</blockquote>
===[[Manuscripts]] and [[Letters]]===
 
===[[Photographs]]===
 
  
===[[Postcards]]===
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<blockquote>The Main Street Museum forces one to contemplate the nature of museums and curating. Why do we save what we save? How do we decide what to discard, what to display, what to hide away, and what to destroy. —'''Joe Citro,''' ''Weird New England,'' 2004</blockquote>
*[[The Harvey/Muhly Comparitive Postcard Studies and Taxonomy]]
 
*[[Postcards from Around the World]]
 
*[[Postcards from the United States]]
 
*[[Novelty Postcards]]
 
===[[Sheet Music]]===
 
  
==Military History Collection==
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[[image:KorenSM.jpg|thumb|300px|The Museum as depicted by Koren in 1996.]]
===[[The War of the Rebellion/War Between the States]]===
 
*[[Botanical Specimens]]
 
*[[Bullets]]
 
*[[Eating Utensils]]
 
*[[Marbles]]
 
*[[Soil Specimens from Civil War Sites]]
 
  
===[[The Renssalaer William Foote Memorial]]===
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==[[Material Culture Studies]], Including [[The Electric Organ]]==
*[[Uniforms and Journals]]
 
===[[Armaments and Military Technology]]===
 
*[[Actual Miltary Technology]]
 
*[[Substitutes or Stand-ins for Weaponry and Munitions]]
 
*:(For World War II items see [[The Leroy Short Sporting and Wild Game Memorial]])
 
  
===[[Sound (Audible) Artifacts]]===
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<blockquote>History is false. It has to be. —'''Jules David Prown'''</blockquote>
*[[78-80 rpm Recordings]]
 
*[[Digital Files]]
 
  
==Art==
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It's really all about questions. We are a museum. We collect and preserve objects. (And other things too. But objects, mainly.) And then we do what all museums are ''supposed'' to do. We discuss the objects. We have ''conversations with you, the viewer, about the objects.'' And we have found, over the years, as we do this, that each object raises a number of questions. Sometimes it seems that each object has about five or 10 questions associated with it. And each question we research raises five or 10 more questions. And we might do this five or ten times for each object. And it also seems that we only end up answering about one question for each ten that we ask the object, or the object asks of us. But with so many questions—just multiply 5 to the 5th power—that still means that we have come up with a lot of answers in spite of ourselves. All in all, we think that the questions are more fun than the answers. But you are free to decide for yourself.
===[[Two Dimensional Pieces]]===
 
*[[Paintings]]
 
*[[Drawings]]
 
*[[Prints]]
 
  
===[[Textiles]]===
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Read what we've written about objects. Read what the experts have said as well. This is just a starting point. We have only just begun to really think about things, and ''our relationships to things.''
*[[Fabric and Tapestry]]
 
*[[Costumes and Clothing]]
 
  
===[[Three Dimensional Art]], Sculpture===
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[[Image:Firestationfront2007SM.jpg|thumb|300px|The exterior of our Fire Station Building during the holidays.]]
  
===[[Modern Art Created By Accident (MACBA)]]===
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<blockquote>A German critic, W. Bürger, writes "Our Museums...are veritable graveyard-yards in which have been heaped up, with a tumulour-like promiscuousness, the remains which have been carried thither...all are hung pell-mell upon the walls of some noncommittal gallery a kind of posthumous asylum, where a people, no longer capable of producing...come to admire this magnificent gallery of debris. —'''[[G. Brown Goode]],''' ''Museums of the Future,'' Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 1891: p. 427 </blockquote>
  
===[[Elvis Aaron Presley Visual Art Amalgam]]===
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[[Image:Flockeddog.jpg|thumb|300px| What is he thinking about, right now?]]
  
*[[Relics of Elvis Aaron Presley]]
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==[[Links]]==
*[[Souvenirs of Elvis]]
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Other Museum-things.
  
===[[Bad Craft]]===
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:''"As in totemism, we participate in each other as we participate in the object."'' —'''Sartre,''' ''Les jeux sont faits,'' 1943, and  '''Norman O. Brown,''' ''Love's Body,'' 1966.
  
[[Image:Flockedcat.jpg|thumb|Cat, or Unidentified Mammal? You decide.]]
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[[Image:FirestationcartooonSM.jpg|thumb|300px| Kevin Huizenga's illustration of the fire station building.]]
  
==[[Fauna]]; [[Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects]]==
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[[Image:Msminterior07duo.jpg|thumb|right|600px| The main exhibition space, stage and research areas of the Museum.]]
  
===[[Humans]]===
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==[[Mission Statement]]==
  
===The [[Ossuary]]; Bones===
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----
  
[[Image:Kitty.jpg|thumb]]
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Hate has no place in the Upper Valley, or anywhere else for that matter.
===[[North American Mammals]]===
 
  
*[[Other Mammalia]]
+
----
*[[Flocked Pets]]
 
**[[Unidentified Mammals]]
 
  
===[[The Leroy Short Sporting and Wild Game Memorial]]===
+
The Main Street Museum, 58 Bridge Street, White River Junction, Vermont, 05001-1909, info@mainstreetmuseum.org, 8(zero)2.356.2776
  
===[[Teeth and More Teeth]]===
+
----
 
 
===Specimens of (or Objects relating to) [[Birds of the Americas]]===
 
*[[Eggs]]
 
 
 
*[[Nests]]
 
 
 
*[[Ornithology]], ''Bird Specimens, all types''
 
*[[The Humingbird Collection]]
 
*[[Pigeons and Doves]]
 
 
 
===[[Fish]]: Aquatic Living With Or Without Bones===
 
 
 
==[[Flora]]; [[Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects]]==
 
 
 
===[[Trees; The Animistic Perspective]]===
 
 
 
*[[The Hall of Fame of Trees]]
 
*[[Pieces of Wood]]
 
**[[Wood Shavings]]
 
 
 
===[[Exotic, Tropic and Sub-tropic Vegetable Samples]]===
 
*[[The Flora of South Florida and Lousiana]]
 
*[[Theodore Roosevelt in Puerto-Rico]]
 
*[[Other Exotic Botanical Specimens]]
 
 
 
===[[Cycadopsida]]===
 
 
 
===[[Corn; Taxanomic Theories relevant to Zea mays]]===
 
 
 
[[Image:SmallflowersSM.jpg|thumb|Small flowers that are, probably, some type of violet. 19th century, c.e.]]
 
 
 
===[[Flowers]]===
 
 
 
===[[Ferns]]===
 
 
 
===[[Mosses and Lichens]]===
 
 
 
[[Image:Coconuthusk.jpg|thumb]]
 
===[[Nuts, Pods and Seeds]]===
 
 
 
==[[Entomology]]; Insects==
 
 
 
==[[Minerals]]; Inanimate, or Apparently Inanimate Objects==
 
*[[Geological Specimens]]; Rocks
 
*[[Relics from Locations of Interest]] see, [[Man Made Minerals]]
 
*[[Soil]]s; Loam, [[Sand]] and Dirt
 
 
 
==[[Other]]==
 
*[[Corals]]
 
*[[Aquatic Mammalia]]
 
 
 
==[[Vinculum]] Categories==
 
====[[Carbon]]====
 
====[[Color as a Hysterical Reaction]]====
 
====[[Flocking; An Industrial Process]]====
 
====The [[Human Head]]====
 
====[[Inanimate Objects]]====
 
====[[Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects]]====
 
====[[Oxidization]]====
 
====[[Round Things]]====
 
====[[Tangled Things]]====
 
*Categories [[Teeth]] and [[More Teeth]] and especially ''Color as a Hysterical Reaction'', ''Round Things'' and ''Tangled Things'' created by curation teams of the Robert Hull Fleming Museum, University of Vermont.)
 
 
 
==[[References and Archive]]==
 

Latest revision as of 12:32, 31 August 2021

Msm interior museum 12079506 898929033529345 1093773669658577739 n.jpg
The Main Street Museum and the famous Underpass—charming example of the vernacular architecture of White River Junction, Vermont.
Entrancesign08.jpg

What We Are and What We Do

The Main Street Museum is a small, public collection of curiosities and artifacts, each one is significant and each one tells some kind of story about human beings and the complex, sometimes baffling universe we are a part of. The aim of the Museum is the study of an accumulation of small details, cultivating among both specialists, and among the general public, a sense of wonder at the big questions that arise when we study and categorize objects and our reactions to them. We believe that our relationships with objects are more complex than usually acknowledged—indeed sometimes far more complex.

Located in central Vermont, our collections are accessible by visiting us in person, or through our online "wiki" style catalog. At present we are open only by appointment, however. As well as studying and cataloging objects we present live music, glass lantern slide presentations, vaudeville shows, films and Spectacles to the public.

Rent the Museum! Click here for more info!

Shoppe with Us! The Museum Gifte Shoppe

The Museum Gift Shoppe is currently closing out its inventory. We still feature "White River Junction; Its not so Bad!" t-shirts, mugs, souvenirs, a wide variety of books on museums and museum-y things, our own booklets—hand-stitched, gumball machine charms and wonky gifts that "must be seen to be believed!"

Our Reading Room!

Monsters! Monsters are cool!

Come see our books!

Covid-19 Hours

The Museum is currently under construction and reorganization during our shut-down of large public events. We will be conducting outdoor projections and "spasms" on the first Fridays in the summer months of 2021. Indoor events will resume before the Fall. Email info@mainstreetmuseum.org or text 8(zero)2.356.2776 before your visit. —Thanks!

Admission

The Museum suggests a $5 to $50 donation for visiting our collections. Volunteer for an hour at the Museum and receive free admittance to the Museum!
Guided tours of the Museum and its collections include a demonstration of the Museum's 1930 Æolian Stroud player piano and 1926 Orthophonic Victrola.

Directions and Parking

Museum Headquarters are located at 58 Bridge Street in downtown White River Junction, adjacent to Railroad Row, between the railroad underpass and the White River. Parking for Museum patrons is available on the street nearby on "Railroad Row" or in the Courthouse/Depot Parking lot.

Volunteer at the Museum

The Main Street Museum is a great place to visit, and a great place to volunteer. You can do everything from museum sitting, to helping out with arranging and maintaining displays, researching and writing museum labels, and, eventually, helping with refreshments or setting up for special events like concerts and First Fridays open house nights.

E-mail us at info@mainstreetmuseum.org for more information, or call us at 8(zero)2-356-2776.

Upcoming Events!

Check out our full schedule here!

Catawiki

The Main Street Museum's Catawiki is a unique digital initiative in material culture studies utilizing open-source code to describe the artifacts in our collections and to create a completely fluid, adaptive taxonomic structure for their interpretation. The Catawiki uses the same "wiki" code utilized by "Wikipedia" and is able to be modified by users from any internet access point. The categories currently acting as a organizational foundation for these structures are:

  • Objects as Evidence of Human Culture, for instance: Pet Toys; Geographically or Historically Significant Items (Relics); Manuscripts; Art; Military History; Textiles and Clothing; Shoes; and "Things, or Fragments of Things Once Owned by, or Associated with, Notable People Particularly Notable Vermonters".
  • Biology: Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects, including
  • Inanimate, or Apparently Inanimate Objects, or Boxes of Rocks including Minerals, Man-made Minerals, Silt from the 1927 Flood, Round and/or Rusted Things.
  • And, of course, Miscellaneous or Other Things.
  • Vinculum (or Overlapping) Categories can be accessed from the sidebar to the left and include: Carbon; Color as a Hysterical Reaction; Cute Things; Flocking; Objects Chewed by Pets; Teeth, More Teeth, Things with Nail-holes; "Things Made from Animals or Parts of Animals" and Tramps and Hobos.

Publicity and Press Clippings

Read what we write about ourselves. Read what others write about us.

Testimonials

The Main Street Museum—White River Junction's answer to the Library of Congress.
Peter Welch, U. S. House of Representatives, 2007.

It is only due to organizations such as yours that the important works of our Country are brought to the attention of the public.
—Marie Reilly, Museum of Bad Art, Dedham, 1998. learn less...!

The Main Street Museum forces one to contemplate the nature of museums and curating. Why do we save what we save? How do we decide what to discard, what to display, what to hide away, and what to destroy. —Joe Citro, Weird New England, 2004

The Museum as depicted by Koren in 1996.

Material Culture Studies, Including The Electric Organ

History is false. It has to be. —Jules David Prown

It's really all about questions. We are a museum. We collect and preserve objects. (And other things too. But objects, mainly.) And then we do what all museums are supposed to do. We discuss the objects. We have conversations with you, the viewer, about the objects. And we have found, over the years, as we do this, that each object raises a number of questions. Sometimes it seems that each object has about five or 10 questions associated with it. And each question we research raises five or 10 more questions. And we might do this five or ten times for each object. And it also seems that we only end up answering about one question for each ten that we ask the object, or the object asks of us. But with so many questions—just multiply 5 to the 5th power—that still means that we have come up with a lot of answers in spite of ourselves. All in all, we think that the questions are more fun than the answers. But you are free to decide for yourself.

Read what we've written about objects. Read what the experts have said as well. This is just a starting point. We have only just begun to really think about things, and our relationships to things.

The exterior of our Fire Station Building during the holidays.

A German critic, W. Bürger, writes "Our Museums...are veritable graveyard-yards in which have been heaped up, with a tumulour-like promiscuousness, the remains which have been carried thither...all are hung pell-mell upon the walls of some noncommittal gallery a kind of posthumous asylum, where a people, no longer capable of producing...come to admire this magnificent gallery of debris. —G. Brown Goode, Museums of the Future, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 1891: p. 427

What is he thinking about, right now?

Links

Other Museum-things.

"As in totemism, we participate in each other as we participate in the object."Sartre, Les jeux sont faits, 1943, and Norman O. Brown, Love's Body, 1966.
Kevin Huizenga's illustration of the fire station building.
The main exhibition space, stage and research areas of the Museum.

Mission Statement


Hate has no place in the Upper Valley, or anywhere else for that matter.


The Main Street Museum, 58 Bridge Street, White River Junction, Vermont, 05001-1909, info@mainstreetmuseum.org, 8(zero)2.356.2776