New-England Museum (Boston)

New England Museum, Court St., Boston, ca.1829[1]

The New-England Museum (1818 - ca.1838) in Boston, Massachusetts, was established at 76 Court Street by Ethan A. Greenwood, Peter B. Bazin, John Dwight and Samuel Jackson.[2] It featured displays of fine art, natural history specimens, wax figures, and other curiosities. Bands of musicians typically performed there during public hours.

History

Around 1818, Greenwood bought Edward Savage's "New York Museum" art collection, and thus established the New England Museum. Artwork acquired included Savage's own paintings—a portrait of George Washington and his family (now in the National Gallery of Art);[3] portraits of Henry Knox; portraits of Robert Morris; and Congress Voting Independence, a painting begun by Robert Edge Pine and completed by Savage.[4][5]

Greenwood expanded the museum collections in 1821 by acquiring items from the estate of John Mix of New Haven, Connecticut. Mix's collection "consisted of wax figures as large as life, paintings, beasts, birds, fishes, serpents and reptiles, Indian and Chinese curiosities and 20,000 different species of insects preserved in glass cases. There were also 3 fine organs."[6] In 1822 Greenwood acquired Philip Wood's Market Museum. He also acquired William Doyle's Columbian Museum in 1825;[7] and the collection of Boston's Linnaean Society.

Financial difficulties forced the museum to close in the late 1830s. Around 1839 Greenwood's "assignees conveyed the collections [of the New England Museum] to Moses Kimball"[6] who then founded Boston Museum and Gallery of Fine Arts.[8][9]

Events

Events at the museum included:

"A vast deal of Rational Amusement for very little money."

– Advertisement, Boston Commercial Gazette, 1824[18]

Images

References

  1. Abel Bowen (1838), Bowen's picture of Boston, Boston: Otis, Broaders and Company, OCLC 5204074
  2. Laws of the commonwealth of Massachusetts. January, 1818; p.473.
  3. National Gallery of Art (USA). "American Portraits of the Late 1700s and Early 1800s".
  4. Charles Henry Hart. Edward Savage, painter and engraver: and his unfinished copper-plate of "the Congress voting independence": a paper read before the Massachusetts Historical Society, January 12, 1905.
  5. U.S. National Park Service. "Congress Voting Independence".
  6. 6.0 6.1 Walter K. Watkins (1917). The New England Museum and the home of art in Boston. Bostonian Society.
  7. The Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography (Historical Society of Pennsylvania) 29. 1905. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. "Museums in Boston". Essex Institute historical collections (Essex Institute) 34. 1898.
  9. Charles Cowley (1868). History of Lowell. Boston: Lee and Shepard.
  10. New England Palladium, Sept. 25, 1818.
  11. Boston Daily Advertiser, Sept. 11, 1818.
  12. Boston Daily Advertiser, Nov.13, 1818.
  13. Boston Commercial Gazette, Dec. 3, 1818.
  14. Boston Daily Advertiser, Feb. 26, 1819.
  15. Boston Kaleidoscope, Feb. 20, 1819.
  16. New England Galaxy, May 21, 1819.
  17. Boston Daily Advertiser, Aug.11, 1819.
  18. Boston Commercial Gazette, 07-05-1824
  19. Boston Daily Advertiser, Dec. 23, 1820.
  20. Boston Daily Advertiser, Dec. 22, 1820.
  21. Boston Daily Advertiser, July 17, 1822.
  22. Columbian Centinel, Nov.3, 1824.
  23. Independent Chronicle and Boston Patriot, Dec.25, 1824.

External links

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