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Tampa Bay History Center is a history museum in Tampa, Florida, United States. It is a Smithsonian Affiliate and has been accredited by the American Alliance of Museums since 2015.[1] Exhibits include coverage of the Tampa Bay area's first native inhabitants, Spanish conquistadors, and historical figures who shaped the area's history, as well as a reproduction of a 1920s cigar store. The museum is on the waterfront at 801 Water Street[2] in Tampa's Channelside District. It opened on January 17, 2009. The History Center building is 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2) with 25,000 square feet (2,300 m2) of exhibit space.[3][4][5]
Established | 2009 |
---|---|
Location | Tampa, Florida, United States |
Coordinates | 27.942702°N 82.45041°W |
Website | www |
The Tampa Bay History Center includes three floors of permanent and temporary exhibition space covering 12,000 years of Florida history, with a special focus on Tampa Bay and the Gulf Coast. The center has a museum store, classrooms, the Witt Research Center (a branch of the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System), a map gallery, an event hall and the Columbia Cafe (a branch of Ybor City's Columbia Restaurant).
Hillsborough County was 14 times its present size when it was established by the Florida Territorial Legislature in 1834. Its boundaries included all or part of 24 present-day counties, stretching from Ocala to Lake Okeechobee and St. Petersburg to Orlando.[6]
In the early 1880s, Tampa residents expressed concern that there was no organized effort to preserve and display local artifacts. In the January 19, 1882, issue of The Sunland Tribune,[7] County Judge J. G. Knapp wrote, "... no time should be lost in snatching the historical artifacts from the waste and death of oblivion. Who shall do it?"
100 years later:
The museum's exhibition galleries explore 500 years of recorded history and 12,000 years of human habitation in the Tampa Bay region in its three floors of exhibitions.[10]
The Touchton Map Library, which is the only cartographic center in the Southeast United States, is home to thousands of maps, charts, and other documents. The collection covers more than 500 years of cartography.[11] The library partners with University of South Florida Libraries to provide the general public with access to thousands more maps.[12] The collection is in the process of being digitized and can be viewed online.[13]
This exhibit is a recent addition to the Tampa Bay History Center, running until February 12, 2023. It details the shared history and experiences of Cuban migrants with Florida's history, the effect Cuban culture has had on Floridian culture, and the history of Cuba created by the people who lived and worked there amid various stages in the past. The exhibition is presented in both English and Spanish, and covers topics from vacations to the political strife that has shaped Cuba into the place it is today.[14]
The Treasure Seekers exhibit spans much of the fourth floor of the museum, and offers patrons the ability to look at and engage with seafaring technology and practice of the past, including a section focusing on using recreations of astrolabes, devices that tracked celestial bodies to help sailors and pirates find their way on the sea. Pirates, conquistadors, and naval history are explored in this exhibit, with interactive presentations like "The Pirate's Fate Theater", immersing guests in a voyage on the sea.[15]
The museum partners with Hernando County to curate the artifacts at this site in Brooksville. It is a former plantation house and slave manor. The land was originally purchased in the 1840s by Bird Pearson, a lawyer and slave owner, who sold it to the Ederington family. The Ederingtons built the first part of the house. The home was renovated by the Robins, who renamed it Chinsegut Hill in 1904. During the Depression, the owners leased the land and manor home to the US government for $1 a year, with the stipulation that they could live in the home until their death. The history center's tour focuses on the stories of these families who lived at the site.[16]
Tampa Bay History Center offers docent-guided walking tours of Tampa's historic sites and neighborhoods. The tours last 90 minutes and cover about one mile. Two notable tours are Ybor City and Central Avenue East.[17]
Tampa Bay History Center hosts a monthly book group focused on Florida literature. The event is free with registration.[18] Florida Conversations is a free, monthly lecture series highlighting research into Florida history.[19]
The Tampa Bay History Center features several activities for youth engagement, including Summer History Adventure Camps.[20] Teen volunteers are enlisted to work as counselors, providing a fun learning environment for kids. Teens are also recruited to serve on the Teen Council and as Educational Volunteers, where they assist with creating educational programming and events.[21] Teens can gain educational assistance through AP Trivia Nights, which cover a variety of topics relevant to high school Advanced Placement courses.[22]
The Tampa Bay History Center offers "History-to-Go" kids on Florida's First People, Florida's Seminoles, and Cigar City. These include primary sources, maps, lesson plans, and supplemental books, and are designed by educators for grades three to five.[23]
The Tampa Bay History Center offers several kinds of field trips for students. There are virtual field trips where museum staff talk via live link to students while showing exhibits, guided in-person field trips, a Central Ave, Black History walking tour, and the Chinsegut Hill Historic Site field trip.[24]
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