Saturday, 29 June 2013

Screaming for Sanitation!

Yesterday at the Military Museum:

Adorable little girl to Grandma: "Gotta go bathroom!"

Grandma: "OK, you're a big girl, go on in, you can go by yourself!"

...


(goes in.)

....


Little girl, inside bathroom: "GRANDMA!!!! GRAAAAANDDDD--MAAAAAAA!!!!"

Grandma: "WHAT?! WHAT'S WRONG!?"

Little girl: "THEY HAVE PINK SOAP!!!!"

Grandma:


For the record, we do indeed have fabulous pink soap.

Thursday, 27 June 2013

A Little Bit About the Erland Lee Museum



The Erland Lee Museum in Stoney Creek has had a tumultuous few years. At the end of 2010, the governing body of Women’s Institute members decided to close down the museum, with very little public notice, citing financial and structural problems. There was no official plan to do anything about it, until a dedicated group of volunteers came together and demanded action. They called themselves the Friends of the Lee, and with community support they have spent the last 2 years tirelessly working to get approvals, get funding, and get things done so the museum can once again be opened to the public.

This museum is in a fabulous location on Ridge Road; designated a National Historic Site, it was where very first Women’s Institute was created (yes, it started in Canada before going over to the UK!) The museum is housed in the Gothic Revival home of the Lee family, overlooking the entire south shore of Lake Ontario from the Niagara Escarpment. Inside the home is set up to reflect the 1890’s time period when the WI originally was thought up at the Lee’s dining room table.

Due to the dedication of these volunteers, many of which are in their golden years of life, the Erland Lee Museum re-opened this past May. I’ll be helping out by teaching volunteers what I learned during my 4 summers as an interpreter at the site, and I'm super excited that the museum doors are open again. 

Monday, 24 June 2013

FISHIES!

At the Steam Museum, we have ventured into the realm of live exhibits. This Summer, we are installing our new and improved water-themed exhibition, Slippery When Wet. It's a fun, interactive exhibit all about the wonderful ways we, and other creatures, use water to live.

While learning a bit about wise water use and ecosystems,  kids (and curious adults too, of course) can try one of the many interactive activities - giant game of snakes and ladders perhaps? Or maybe try pumping water with a Waterloo Pump, or discovering how a toilet works? All sorts of fun things in store. Including a gigantic outhouse.  

A waterloo pump

The reading nook 

Giant outhouse



But, this time around we've got something extra special - two live water ecosystems to observe. The first has little darting silvery fish and live plants, and the second has slow, slimy snails.

Live ecosystems! 


Does this make us a zoo, then? I remember a while back, the ROM hosted it's own WATER exhibition, and the most memorable part was their live collection of fish, crustaceans, and (most fascinating/disturbing of all) a tank full of blood-sucking lampreys. I have to say I'm glad we will NOT be having any lampreys.

I have tentatively named the fish we DO have Inky, Blinky, and Stinky - but it's pretty hard to remember who is who. The snails are all nameless; perhaps we should have a voting area to determine their names, or a visitor suggestion box?

The exhibit officially opens June 21, 2013.

Friday, 7 June 2013

Pop-Up Exhibit

In the office at the Museum of Steam and Technology, someone has posted a comic from the funny pages:



And it's funny because it is true. Most museums I have worked at have gigantic collections that have been amassed over many years (and many different collections policies), but only a small percent is actually on display.

This is the case with Steam. Not seen by the public is a huge collection of material culture from Hamilton's industrial and manufacturing history. A giant steam roller (badly rusted out); a wooden canoe; a Westinghouse fridge from the 50's; an ammonia compressor; among other big, (occasionally rusty) treasures. 

This past week, we got a call from the elderly donor of one such item. 

The artefact in question was a massive, solid wood, hand-crafted bedroom set. Yes, we know. An odd thing to have in a museum about water-pumping steam engines. But part of our mandate is to interpret the manufacturing history of the city, and it just so happens that this furniture set is a rare surviving example of one made by the Malcolm and Souter Furniture Company of Hamilton, founded c. 1885




Although it is a very nice set, I don't think it has ever actually been on display. 

This donor still felt a very strong connection to the pieces she gave to the museum, and expressed her great hope that one day the bedroom set would be exhibited, because she really wanted her family to see it. 

Not wanting to disappoint her, on Friday the curator, assistant curator, and I took it upon ourselves to bring the bed out of storage, put it back together (it was stored in several pieces to save space), and display it for one exclusive week in the back of the Woodshed building so the donor and her family could come and admire it on the weekend. 


Deb even had a brass plaque made up recognizing the donors 


Not a bad little exhibit by any means! We really hope the donor and her family will be pleased with our effort to give her treasure the attention it deserves.

**UPDATE**

They were. Apparently there were some tears. :*-)