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Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture

Coordinates: 47°39′39.5″N 122°18′35.2″W / 47.660972°N 122.309778°W / 47.660972; -122.309778
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Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture
Map
Established1899 (1899)
Location17 Ave Northeast and Northeast 45th Street, Seattle, Washington, United States
TypeNatural History Museum
AccreditationAmerican Alliance of Museums[1]
Visitors109,000 (2009) [2]
DirectorJulie Stein
OwnerUniversity of Washington

The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture (Burke Museum) is a natural history museum in Seattle, Washington, in the United States. Established in 1899 as the Washington State Museum, it traces its origins to a high school naturalist club formed in 1879. The museum is the oldest natural history museum west of the Mississippi River and boasts a collection of more than 16 million artifacts, including the world's largest collection of spread bird wings. Located on the campus of the University of Washington, the Burke Museum is the official state museum of Washington.

History

Young Naturalists Society

The roots of the Burke Museum can be traced to a natural history club formed by high school students in the 19th century. The group was formed in December 1879 by students Edmond S. Meany, J. O. Young, P. Brooks Randolph, and Charles Denny. Denny's father, city founder Arthur Denny, was a regent of the Territorial University of Washington and arranged for the group to meet on campus. The Young Naturalists adopted a constitution and bylaws, and the official name "Young Naturalists Society," in 1880. As the founding members graduated high school and matriculated to the university, the membership of the Young Naturalists expanded to include university students.[3]

The Young Naturalists Society clubhouse in Seattle, pictured probably in the late 1800s.

In 1882 Orson "Bug" Johnson was retained as a biology instructor at the University of Washington, bringing 20,000 animal specimens with him. Johnson immediately involved himself with the Young Naturalists, and the addition of his collection gave the club the largest natural history collection in the Pacific Northwest. Under Johnson's direction, the Young Naturalists began expanding this nucleus of specimens and artifacts, which were stored in a backroom of the Denny home.[4] A permanent structure to house the growing collection was built on the Territorial University's campus in 1886, with the club soliciting donations to fund its construction. Many specimens in the collection were regularly borrowed by university faculty to assist in instruction.[5]

Orson "Bug" Johnson led the Young Naturalists to acquire the largest natural history collection in the Pacific Northwest.

In the 1890s Edmond Meany returned to teach history at the university. He led a revitalization of the group that he had helped found a decade before, bringing in new members, including women. By this point the society's collection had grown to include more than 60,000 specimens.[6]

Transition to the Washington State Museum

The University of Washington moved its campus from downtown Seattle to its present location in 1895. The portion of the Young Naturalists collection that had been used in university instruction was relocated to the university's Denny Hall while the remainder stayed in the Young Naturalists clubhouse downtown. In 1899 the Washington State Legislature designated the portion of Denny Hall used to house the collection as the Washington State Museum.[7] In 1904 the Young Naturalists voted to donate the rest of their collection to the Washington State Museum and disband.[3]

The 1909 Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition (AYP Expo) brought a boon of construction to the University of Washington's campus. When the fair ended, the Washington State Museum moved into its first dedicated building, the fair's former California Building. Persistent leaks in that facility caused it to later relocate to the fair's former Forestry Building which, it was soon discovered, was infested with bark beetles. For four years, from 1923 to 1927, the museum's collections were disbursed around campus.[3]

The situation was finally resolved in 1927 when the museum moved into what had originally been constructed as the Washington State Building for the AYP Expo.[8]

This photograph of the Washington State Building, later the Washington State Museum, was taken probably in 1909.

In 1929, Erna Gunther became the museum's director, a post she would hold for more than 25 years.[3]

The museum found itself, once again, displaced in 1957 after its AYP Expo-era building was condemned.[3]

A new name

When Thomas Burke died in 1925, his wife, Caroline McGilvra Burke, sought an appropriate monument for her husband that would “advance the cause of a better mutual understanding between ... the people of the Pacific shores.” A collector of Native American artifacts herself, she bequeathed her personal collection to the museum following her death in 1932. The Burke estate offered to help fund a new state museum, with one major stipulation - the structure had to be named after Burke. Some University officials balked at this, as did Erna Gunther. The institution had been known as the Washington State Museum since 1899, and the Burke funds would only go toward a third of the construction costs. Other funds came from a National Science Foundation grant, but the new building was still smaller than one that Erna Gunther recommended. Nevertheless, the new facility was ultimately dedicated on May 3, 1964, with its new director, Walter A. Fairservis, at the helm.[3]

In 1996, the Burke Museum launched a ten-year plan to move its exhibition space off campus and into a downtown Seattle location. Under the proposal, curators and preservationists would continue to work at the University of Washington while exhibits would be hosted at a new site. The proposal ultimately did not materialize. In 2014, the museum made another push for a new facility, asking the Washington State Legislature for half the $95 million needed to construct a 110,000 square-foot facility to replace its current building.[9]

Collections

Totem poles outside the Burke Museum

The museum houses more than 16 million artifacts and specimens in its anthropology, biology, and geology research divisions. According to the museum, its ornithology division includes the largest collection of spread bird wings in the world, while the museum's collection of frozen bird tissues is the world's second largest. The museum states that its collection of Northwest Coast ethnographic material is the fifth largest collection of Native American art in the world, numbering 10,000 objects, among which are "the important early Swan, Eells, Emmons, and Waters collections, as well as the unmatched Blackman-Hall and Ottenberg contemporary silkscreen print collections, and the Steinman contemporary Northwest Coast sculpture collection."[10] The museum's Northwest Coast image research database includes "the Holm/Wright collection of images of Northwest Coast art from 200 museums and private collections, the Harris collection of Northwest Coast silver jewelry images, and de Menil photographs of Northwest Coast totem poles, as well as the George MacDonald Archive of historical Northwest Coast photographs."[10]

Exhibits

Long-term exhibits

The Burke Museum currently displays three long-term exhibits: "Life and Times of Washington State," "Pacific Voices," and "Treasures of the Burke." "Life and Times of Washington State" is a natural history exhibit on the 545-million-year evolution of the Northwest region. Features of this exhibit include large-scale fossils such as an allosaurus skeleton cast and the giant ground sloth fossil found during the construction of Sea-Tac International Airport. There are also displays that explain the geologic history of the area and its influence on the terrain and climate.

"Pacific Voices" is a cultural exhibit that tells the stories or traditions of 19 different Native American and Pacific Rim cultures through art, artifacts, ceremonial objects, and audio/visual documentaries.

Temporary exhibits

The Burke also hosts a schedule of changing exhibits throughout the year in its temporary galleries. These changing exhibits include traveling exhibits organized by other institutions and original exhibits curated by Burke staff.

Museum governance

Governing body

The museum is administered through the University of Washington College of Arts and Sciences;[11] the University of Washington Board of Regents serves as the museum's governing body.

Exterior of the Burke Museum pictured in 2015.

BMA

The Burke Museum Association (BMA) is an organization made up of the Burke's Board of Trustees and an advisory council. Their mission is to actively support the Burke Museum by increasing public visibility, raising public and private funds to support programming and future expansion, and providing strong ties to the community.

Funding

In 2009, the Burke Museum had an annual budget of about $5 million, half of which came from an appropriation from the state of Washington. The budget did not include substantial in-kind support provided by the University of Washington as owner of the Burke property. Other sources of funding include interest from its endowment (10 percent), foundation grants and individual donations (27 percent), and admission fees and gift shop sales (13 percent).[2]

References

  1. ^ "Accredited Museums". aam-us.org. American Alliance of Museum. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  2. ^ a b Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture Annual Report July 2008 - June 2009 (PDF). University of Washington. 2009. pp. 41–42.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Stein, Allan. "Burke Museum (Seattle)". historylink.org. HistoryInk. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  4. ^ Frykman, George (1998). Seattle's Historian and Promoter: The Life of Edmond Stephen Meany. WSU Press. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0874221684.
  5. ^ Wills, Antoinette (2014). University of Washington (Campus History). Arcadia. p. 23. ISBN 1467131822.
  6. ^ "Orson Bennett Johnson, the Young Naturalists, and the Birth of a Museum". washington.edu. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  7. ^ "About Us". burkemuseum.org. Burke Museum. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  8. ^ Dorpat, Paul (4 October 2013). "Washington State Building, Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, ca. 1909". Seattle Times. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  9. ^ Jing, Zezshou (2 October 2014). "Burke Museum raises funds for planned expansion". The Daily. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  10. ^ a b Ethnology Collections Database: About the collection." Burke Museum.
  11. ^ King, Marsha (May 18, 1996). "Growing Pains -- The Burke Museum Wants To Show Off More Goodies In Bigger Digs Downtown". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 28 August 2012.

47°39′39.5″N 122°18′35.2″W / 47.660972°N 122.309778°W / 47.660972; -122.309778