Slater Memorial Museum

Slater Memorial Museum

John Fox Slater Memorial Museum in 1958
Location 108 Crescent Street
Coordinates 41°32′1″N 72°4′55″W / 41.53361°N 72.08194°W / 41.53361; -72.08194Coordinates: 41°32′1″N 72°4′55″W / 41.53361°N 72.08194°W / 41.53361; -72.08194
Built 1888
Architect Stephen C. Earle, Cudworth & Woodworth
Architectural style Richardsonian Romanesque
Part of Chelsea Parade Historic District (#88003215[1])
Added to NRHP May 12, 1989

The J. F. Slater Memorial Museum, also known as Slater Memorial Museum, is an historic building and art museum on the grounds of the Norwich Free Academy in Norwich, Connecticut. It is designed in Richardsonian Romanesque architecture and is said to be the finest work of architect Stephen C. Earle.[2]:44,48[3][4]

It is a contributing property in the Chelsea Parade Historic District.[2]

The museum was presented to the Norwich Free Academy by William A. Slater, son of John Fox Slater, who had endowed the school.

The museum features a collection of plaster casts of famous Roman, Greek, Egyptian and Renaissance statues. The museum also exhibits colonial and local historic artifacts, as well as 18th-20th-century American paintings and decorative arts, 17th-19th-century European paintings and decorative arts, African and Oceanic sculpture, and Native American objects. The adjacent Converse Art Gallery hosts six changing exhibitions throughout the year. The gallery, built in 1906, was designed by the leading local firm of Cudworth & Woodworth.[5]

The museum is a member of the North American Reciprocal Museums program.

See also

References

  1. National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  2. 1 2 William Devlin and Bruce Clouette (June 25, 1988). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Chelsea Parade" (PDF). National Park Service. and Accompanying 25 photos, undated but seemingly from 1988 (Photo 11 shows Slater Memorial)
  3. "Slater Memorial Museum".
  4. "What is this place".
  5. Class of 1884, Harvard College: Twentieth-Fifth Anniversary Report of the Secretary. Cambridge: University Press, June 1909.

Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "article name needed". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 


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