MUSEUMS IN UTAH

Deseret Museum, 1911
Within the first decade of the initial Mormon settlement of Utah in 1847,
plans were discussed for the establishment of a museum. The Universal Scientific
Society was formed in 1854 to promote "a museum, library and reading
room" in Salt Lake City. In the autumn of 1855 two French scientists
spent a month in Utah. Their report commented that the "Mormons have
for some time been occupied by the idea of founding a universal museum.
They have already got together a considerable quantity of objects."
The United States government was also interested in the flora, fauna, and
geography of the new lands that were being opened up and, in fact, had sent
expeditions into the territory beginning in 1843 J.C. Frémont. Specimens
collected were deposited with the sponsoring surveys, agencies, and museums
in Washington, D.C., where many are still preserved today.
In 1869 John W. Young, son of Brigham Young, established a museum near Temple
Square as a private venture. The one-story adobe building was initially
known as the Salt Lake City Museum and Menagerie, and it included a variety
of live native animals as well as a cageful of monkeys. It ultimately became
the Deseret Museum, from which other Utah museums would spin off or benefit
from by obtaining some of its collections.
The Desert Museum's first caretaker was Guglielmo Sangiovanni, who was succeeded
by Joseph L. Barfoot in 1870. In 1871 the museum and curator Barfoot, without
the menagerie, moved into other quarters. Exhibits focused on home manufactures,
minerals, fossils, prehistory, and items of Mormon Church history. Ownership
of the museum passed to the Mormon Church in 1878. Dr. James E. Talmage,
a scientist and president of LDS College, became the first professional
curator in 1891 and served until the museum's dissolution in 1918. At that
time the collections were divided up, with the taxidermied animals and some
prehistoric items going to Brigham Young University, the geological specimens
and some animals to the University of Utah, and the bulk of the pioneer
historical material being retained by the church.
The church collections resided in Temple Square's Bureau of Information
until 1976, and were later transferred in 1983 to the newly built Museum
of Church History and Art immediately west of Temple Square. This building
currently houses extensive collections and exhibits. The museum is part
of the LDS Church's Arts and Sites Division which also oversees other historic
Mormon sites in the United States.
Two organizations have been instrumental in museum developments; they are
the Daughters of Utah Pioneers (DUP) and the Sons of Utah Pioneers (SUP).
The DUP was formally chartered in 1901 and sought to find a permanent home
for its pioneer collections, starting a fund-raising effort toward this
goal in 1911. With their own resources and additional state support, construction
of the Pioneer Memorial Museum near the State Capitol Building was completed
in 1950. The state-owned building is occupied on a 99-year lease. According
to art historian Dr. Robert Olpin, "they own and maintain one of the
most extensive pioneer art collections in the nation." The DUP is organized
by counties, and is further divided into "camps," many of which
maintain small one-room relic halls in towns throughout the state.
The Sons of Utah Pioneers was organized in 1933. Its "collection"
began in 1934 and was actually attributable to the Horace Sorensen family,
who provided substantial funding and space. The Sorensens assembled an important
collection of pioneer vehicles, railroad stock, equestrian equipment, structures,
guns, etc., which was located in the East Millcreek area of Salt Lake City,
where it was known as Pioneer Village. The collection itself was deeded
to the SUP in 1955, and was later sold to the owners of Lagoon Amusement
Park in Farmington, where it has remained since 1976 as a commercial attraction.
The Utah State Historical Society was founded in 1897, and later joined
with the Utah Division of State History, a state agency. The division took
on its museum mission when it moved into Salt Lake's historic Rio Grande
Railroad Depot in 1980. Its collection is known as the Utah State History
Museum, and has expanded considerably in a few short years, particularly
in non-Mormon material culture. Various other state agencies/entities have
contributed to the growth of exhibits, museums, and collections in Utah;
they include the Utah Arts Council, the Utah Division of State Parks, and
the state's several universities and colleges.
The Salt Lake Art Association was formed in 1881 through the efforts of
Alice Merrill Horne. From this beginning, the "Alice Art Collection"
grew into the Utah Art Institute, founded in 1899. Annual purchases of exhibition
works through the years have resulted in the core of a respectable state
art collection under the aegis of the Utah Arts Council, which maintains
gallery spaces.
Utah's first state park, the old Territorial Capitol Building in Fillmore,
was opened in 1930. It was the predecessor of eight more interpretive state
park sites/museums now managed by the Division of State Parks. Their specific
designations (and locations) are Anasazi (Boulder), Edge of the Cedars (Blanding),
Camp Floyd/Stagecoach Inn (Fairfield), Fremont Indian (twenty miles southwest
of Richfield), Iron Mission (Cedar City), Pioneer Trail (Salt Lake City),
and Utah Field House of Natural History (Vernal). Subjects range from dinosaurs
to prehistoric humans to pioneers and early military history.
In 1892 the University of Utah emerged from the University of Deseret, absorbing
parts of the earlier institution. Museum collections were primarily for
teaching purposes. Some were assembled by Dr. Talmage, who, in addition
to holding a university chair in geology, continued to curate the Deseret
Museum collection previously mentioned. Departmental scientific collections
were developed from the turn of the century on, the most spectacular being
a huge array of dinosaur bones quarried by the university at Jensen, Utah,
in 1924. The Earth Science Museum, located in a remodeled university cafeteria,
was built in the early 1930s to showcase the dinosaur materials. Another
departmental museum in the Anthropology department was constructed in 1950
in a World War II army mess hall adjacent to Fort Douglas. Both museums,
which were closed in 1969, were essentially the forerunners of the Utah
Museum of Natural History. The Fort Douglas Military Museum, founded in
1974, located on the original fort property, is operated cooperatively by
the Utah National Guard and the university, the landowner.
The Utah Museum of Natural History was established at the University of
Utah by the legislature in 1963. This state museum, opened in 1969 in the
former George Thomas Library, features anthropological, biological, and
geological materials in a unified program of exhibits, education, and research.
Specimens include those from the Deseret Museum as well as from the Charles
Nettleton Strevell Museum that was located in the old Lafayette School on
South Temple Street from 1939 until 1947.
Efforts to establish a Utah Museum of Fine Arts go back to the days of Alice
Merrill Horne. The University of Utah created the UMFA in 1951 with its
acquisition of the art collection of former Utahn, Mrs. Richard Hudnut.
Its collection was housed originally in the Park Building; a new building
for the museum was constructed as part of the Art and Architecture Center
and opened in 1970. Greatly expanded and valuable collections coupled with
a program of major traveling exhibitions have established it as the premier
art museum in the state.
Several other museums associated with the state should be mentioned. The
Prehistoric Museum at the College of Eastern Utah in Price was founded in
1961 and has doubled its space with the construction of a new facility in
1991. Its exhibits and collections focus on the Central Utah region in the
fields of anthropology and paleontology. Weber State University's Museum
of Natural Science in Ogden was founded in 1969 and serves primarily as
a teaching museum in the areas of biology and geology. Farther north in
Logan, the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, founded in 1982 and located
at Utah State University (USU), features traveling exhibits and exhibitions
from its contemporary and Native American collections. USU's Man and His
Bread Museum, founded in 1959, features agricultural equipment and buildings,
from circa 1840 to 1950, in an off-campus outdoor farm setting.
The Salt Lake Art Center, originally known as the "Art Barn,"
was founded in 1931 near the University of Utah. An art school and gallery
in the beginning, this private organization moved to the county-owned Salt
Palace complex in 1979. Its collections and exhibitions focus on contemporary
art.
While many museum efforts have been centered in the Salt Lake Valley, developments
have taken place elsewhere in the state. Moab established a museum in 1958;
currently known as the Dan O'Laurie Museum, it features the prehistory,
history, and geology of the area. In Green River, the John Wesley Powell
River History Museum was opened in 1990. This was followed in 1991 by the
Museum of the San Rafael, in Castle Dale, whose theme is the natural history
of Emery County. The Western Mining and Railroad Museum was established
in Helper in 1964. A counterpart, the Tintic Mining Museum, was founded
in Eureka in 1973. The Fairview Museum of History and Art in Sanpete County
was founded in 1966; it displays historical artifacts and models of sculptor
Avard Fairbanks. As is the case with most small Utah museums, these organizations
are manned by volunteers.
In Utah County, the state's second most populous, the Springville High School
Art Gallery was begun in 1903. Later named the Springville Museum of Art
when its building was dedicated in 1937 as a community facility, it holds
a broad representative collection of the works of Utah artists. Also in
Utah County, under the auspices of Brigham Young University a number of
museum facilities have developed over the years in Provo. Beginning in 1965,
the BYU art department assumed curation of collections in galleries of the
Harris Fine Arts Center. This important collection, rich in Utah, American,
European, and Oriental art, moved into a major new facility known as the
Museum of Art at BYU in 1993. In 1978, the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum
was founded and initially built around the hunting trophies of its namesake
and benefactor; the museum also has other exhibits and curates valuable
scientific collections. Anthropological materials, some from the Deseret
Museum, are curated in the off-campus Museum of Peoples and Culture. Important
fossils collections, especially dinosauria, under the care of the geology
department occupy a separate campus building known as the "Ossuary."
In downtown Provo, unrelated to BYU, is the private McCurdy Historical Doll
Museum, established in 1979. To the north of Provo in Lehi is the private
Hutchings Museum of Natural History, an eclectic collection established
in 1955.
The Ogden Union Station Museum opened in 1978; its holdings include railroad
memorabilia as well as the significant Browning firearms collection and
the Browning-Kimball Car Museum. The Eccles Community Art Center, housed
in one of Ogden's historic mansions, focuses on local and Utah art. At nearby
Roy, the new Hill Air Force Base Museum has an outstanding collection of
aircraft and artifacts. The Brigham City Museum-Gallery, north of Ogden,
was founded in 1970 and focuses its exhibits on art, handicrafts, and local
pioneer history.
Space limitations prevent listing the many worthwhile Utah organizations
that provide historic, cultural, aesthetic, or natural history experiences.
In the Salt Lake Valley and environs the Wheeler Historic Farm, the Hansen
Planetarium, the Children's Museum of Utah, Tracy Aviary, Red Butte Gardens
and Arboretum, and Hogle Zoo should be mentioned. In Park City, the Kimball
Art Center and the Park City Museum are also worth visiting.
Utah's museums have developed because of the desire of its citizens, educators,
and community leaders to preserve the state's heritage of diverse culture,
art, and unique natural history. This has been accomplished with minimal
public resources. The movement has been enhanced and facilitated by a strong
Utah Museums Association, founded in 1972.
See: James E. Talmage, "The Deseret Museum," Improvement Era
11 (1911); Ralph V. Chamberlain, Life Sciences at the University of Utah
(1950); Lila Carpenter Eubanks, "The Deseret Museum," Utah
Historical Quarterly 50 (1982); Robert S. Olpin, Dictionary of Utah
Art (1980); Directory of Utah Museums and Galleries (1986); Daughters
of Utah Pioneers, Daughters of Utah Pioneers Through the Years (1990).
Donald V. Hague