SMITHSONIAN NUMISMATICS HALL CLOSING Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 16, April 18, 2004, Article 7

    SMITHSONIAN NUMISMATICS HALL CLOSING

    Gar Travis and Dick Johnson forwarded an Associated Press
    article about the impending closure of the Smithsonian's
    Numismatics Hall at the Museum of American History in
    Washington, D.C.:

    "The world's largest collection of money and medals will be
    closed to the public this summer after 40 years, the National
    Museum of American History announced Friday. Selections
    from the 1.6 million coins, medals and pieces of paper money
    are shown in the museum's Numismatics Hall. The collection
    will remain open to scholars and will make loans to other
    museums after the closing, set for August.

    The collection includes 700,000 pieces of money issued by
    the Confederacy during the Civil War, and feathers from the
    rare, gaudy quetzal bird, once used for money in Central
    America."

    "The decision to close the hall is part of a reorganization
    undertaken after an official panel criticized the museum's
    organization.

    "The original design scheme of separate subject halls will be
    updated as the museum moves to thematic presentations,
    reinterpreting collections in a narrative format," the museum
    said in a statement announcing the closing.

    Spokesman Melinda Machado said that, for example, an
    exhibit on the American military will include a section on
    how the Revolutionary War was paid for."

    To read the full article, see: Full Article

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2004-04-18
Volume
  • 7

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