Redpath Museum
Museum of natural history in Quebec, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Museum of natural history in Quebec, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Redpath Museum is a museum of natural history belonging to McGill University[1] and located on the university's campus on Sherbrooke Street West in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It was built in 1882 as a gift from the sugar baron Peter Redpath.[2]
Established | 1882 |
---|---|
Location | 859 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Type | Museum of natural history |
Director | Catherine Turgeon |
Public transit access | at Peel station at McGill station |
Website | www.mcgill.ca/redpath |
It houses collections of interest to ethnology, biology, paleontology, and mineralogy/geology.[1] The collections were started by some of the same individuals who founded the Smithsonian and Royal Ontario Museum collections. The current director is Catherine Turgeon. Commissioned by Redpath to mark the 25th anniversary of Sir John William Dawson's appointment as Principal, the Museum was designed by A.C. Hutchison and A.D. Steele. McGill University's Redpath Museum website characterizes it as an "idiosyncratic expression of eclectic Victorian Classicism" as well as "an unusual and late example of the Greek Revival in North America."[3]
It is the oldest building built specifically to be a museum in Canada.[1][4] Both the museum's interior and exterior have been utilized as a set, for movies and commercials. [citation needed]
Five collections, containing approximately 16,000 specimens from all over the world, are identified by their initial letters:
The Lyman entomology collections were transferred in 1961 by D. Keith McE. Kevan to Macdonald Campus in Sainte Anne-de-Bellevue, leading to the creation of the Lyman Entomological Museum and Research Laboratory.
The museum's important collection of fossils owes much of its beginning to Sir William Dawson who provided not only many of the fossils of plants from his native Nova Scotia, but procured many important specimens from around the world. Dr Thomas Clark, for many years up until his death, was a fixture at the museum and was renowned for his pioneering work on fossils from the Burgess Shale, some of the oldest known anywhere.
The ethnological and archeological collection is one of the oldest in North America and began with Sir William Dawson's collection. It received further material from the Natural History Society of Montreal. It now has over 17,000 items from Africa, ancient Egypt, Oceania, paleolithic Europe and South America. The collection of First Nations artifacts that were once part of the collection now are housed in the nearby McCord Museum in Montreal.
The Museum is affiliated with: CMA, CHIN, and Virtual Museum of Canada.
The museum, accessible by walking from many downtown Montreal locations, is also near the McGill station on the Montreal Metro Green Line.
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