Whatcom Museum Explained

Whatcom Museum
Map Type:Washington#USA
Location:Bellingham, Washington
Type:Art museum, History museum
Accreditation:American Alliance of Museums
Architect:Olson Kundig Architects, Lightcatcher Building
Embedded:
Old City Hall
Embed:yes
Coordinates:48.7528°N -122.48°W
Location:Bellingham, Washington
Built:1892
Architect:Alfred Lee
Architecture:Late Victorian
Added:April 03, 1970
Refnum:70000648

The Whatcom Museum is a natural history and art museum located in Bellingham, Washington. Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums,[1] the Whatcom Museum has a three building campus that includes Old City Hall, the Lightcatcher building, and the Syre Education Center.

About

The Whatcom Museum was established as a non-profit organization in 1982.[2] The museum has a three building campus that includes Old City Hall, Syre Education Center, and the Lightcatcher building which encloses the Family Interactive Gallery (FIG).

The museum is jointly managed by the City of Bellingham[3] and the Whatcom Museum Foundation.[4]

Architecture

The old city hall building was originally built in 1892 for the former town of New Whatcom. The original building was designed in a Late Victorian style by Alfred Lee, a local architect, who used red brick and Chuckanut sandstone for its construction.[5] The design itself was an almost exact replica of the second Saginaw County Courthouse in Saginaw, Michigan (1884, destroyed 1971), designed by Fred W. Hollister.[6]

At the time of construction, the building was situated on a bluff above Bellingham Bay. However, over the years, significant amounts of the waterfront were filled in to make more land.[7] Currently, the building sits above Maritime Heritage Park.

The building served as city hall until 1936,[8] and became part of the museum in 1941.[9] In 1962, fire damaged the building, but efforts from the community raised money to restore the building.[10]

In 2009, The Whatcom Museum opened a location in the newly designed Lightcatcher building. The Lightcatcher, designed by Seattle-based Olson Kundig Architects, is named for its 37 feet high and 180 feet long translucent wall, which facilitates a number of energy saving strategies.

Collections

The Whatcom Museum houses a collection of over 30,000 objects.[11]

Key holdings in the collection are the 4,000 plus items from the archives of Pacific Northwest photographers Darius Kinsey and Tabitha Kinsey.[12] [13]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Teehan . Joe . March 20, 2018 . The Whatcom Museum gets the accreditation its staff worked hard for . 2023-03-12 . KGMI . en-US.
  2. Web site: 2013-05-09 . Nonprofit Explorer - Whatcom Museum Foundation . 2023-03-12 . ProPublica . en.
  3. Web site: About the Museum . 2023-03-12 . City of Bellingham . en-US.
  4. Web site: About the Museum . 2023-03-12 . The Whatcom Museum . en-US.
  5. McQuaide, p.34
  6. "Saginaw County, Michigan" - CourthouseHistory.com. Retrieved 2018-02-27.
  7. Kirk, p.221
  8. Mueller, p.51
  9. http://www.whatcommuseum.org/pages/index.php?page=oldCityHall Whatcom Museum website
  10. Kirk, p.222
  11. Web site: About . 2023-03-14 . The Whatcom Museum . en-US.
  12. Web site: Harris . John M. . 2023-01-20 . Why Ken Burns and Ralph Lauren buy Kinsey photos from the Whatcom Museum . 2023-03-14 . The Seattle Times . en-US.
  13. Web site: Jiménez . Javiera Carmona . August 3, 2022 . Bellingham's past from the voices of the present . 2023-03-14 . Cascadia Daily . en.