The
Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History is the
oldest museum in Santa Barbara, California
, founded in 1916.
The museum
is located in Mission
Canyon
, immediately behind the Santa Barbara
Mission
. Set in a traditional southern California
environment, the museum campus occupies of oak woodland along
Mission Creek. It is housed in a
mission-style, Spanish Mediterranean complex
of buildings. The museum has 5,700 members and more than 150,000
people visit the Museum each year.
History
The early roots of the Museum date back to the 1890's, when a group
of professional and amateur scientists started the Santa Barbara
Natural History Society and an accompanying museum at 1226
State Street. Though the effort
waned at the end of the century, the arrival of
ornithologist William Leon Dawson from Ohio
re-ignited the effort.
Dawson and a group of prominent Santa
Barbarans founded the Museum of Comparative Oology, which was first
located in two outbuildings on his property on Puesta del Sol in
Mission
Canyon
. The initial holdings were assembled from
his own extensive collection of bird eggs as well as collections of
other community members. According to the Museum's website, Dawson
believed
oology—the study of bird eggs—“would
throw a flood of light upon the trend of life itself,” yielding
“the secrets of life’s origins and its destiny.”
Though it began from a collection of bird eggs, the holdings of the
Museum were soon expanded into other realms by its Board of
Directors.
The successor to William Dawson as director
was Ralph Hoffmann, a Harvard
-trained
educator, botanist, and ornithologist. The next director Paul
Marshall Rhea who had been President of the American Association of
Museums, Director of the Cleveland Museum of Natural
History, and Director of the Carnegie Foundation in Washington,
D.C.
. Some of the notable benefactors of the Museum
included Dr. Caroline Hazard who was President of Wellesley
College
at the time: she donated part of her estate in
Mission
Canyon
for a new museum building. This building was
built with funds donated by Mrs. Rowland G. Hazard in memory of her
late husband and opened in 1923.
In 1937, Arthur Sterry Coggeshall came to Santa Barbara, and took
the position of Director of the Museum.
He had also worked at
various prestigious museums, such as the American Museum
of Natural History
in New York
City
and the Carnegie Museum
of Natural History
in Pittsburgh
. Upon coming, he convinced Max Fleischmann,
heir to the
Fleischmann Yeast
fortune, to build Fleischmann Auditorium as a condition of his
employment. Coggeshall was later a key player in the foundation of
the California Association of Museums and the Western Museum
Association.
From the 1960s to the '80s, the Museum had a large role in the
field of
environmental action.
Museum scientists helped establish the whale stranding network and
participated in the
California
Condor Project.
Albert Einstein, who was visiting
the
museum with his wife, in
1931, remarked "I can see that this museum has been
built by the work of love."
Exhibits
The museum is renowned for fine
dioramas of
birds, mammals, and southern California habitats.
These were illustrated
in the 1930s and 1960s by famous artists of the California
school of plein-aire
painters. The museum is also known for its halls of marine
life, geology, and
Chumash Indian
life, as well as an
art gallery
dedicated to antique
natural history
prints. It has collections of over 3 million specimens and an
active research program with a focus on
marine biology,
terrestrial vertebrates,
insects,
anthropology,
geological mapping, and natural history art.
Exhibits include "Butterflies Alive" and “Bringing the Condors
Home” telling the story of the decline and beginning of recovery of
the
California Condor.
The museum’s Gladwin Planetarium was renovated in early
2005 and equipped with technology to display distant
planets,
stars, and
galaxies.
The
Ty Warner Sea
Center
, located on Santa Barbara’s historic Stearns Wharf
, is an off-site facility owned and operated by the
Museum of Natural
History. It opened in April of
2005.
Among the exhibits of the Sea Center are a
Tide Pool with waves rushing into it every
60 seconds, the
Wet Deck featuring direct access to
the water below, the
Channel Theater, the
Workshop, the
Whale Karaoke station, and the
plastinated dolphin.
External links
References
- http://www.sbnature.org/visitors/history01.php
- Risley, M. (1985). Santa Barbara a traveler's guide. Goleta,
CA: The Alternative Press.