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Established | 2003 |
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Location | Idaho Falls, Idaho, United States |
Coordinates | 43°29′26″N 112°02′18″W / 43.490679°N 112.0382058°W |
Type | history, science |
Visitors | approx. 90,000 per year |
Director | Jeff Carr |
Website | museumofidaho.org |
The Museum of Idaho (MOI) is a history and science museum in downtown Idaho Falls, Idaho. The museum features exhibits, collections, and programs focused on the social and environmental history of Idaho and the Intermountain West, as well as prominent traveling exhibits on a variety of subjects.[1][2] Its tagline is “bringing the world to Idaho, and Idaho to the world”.[3]
The museum is a private nonprofit organization with approximately 12 full-time staff, 90 volunteers, and a 16-member board of trustees. The museum receives about 90,000 visitors each year and operates a store that sells books, educational toys, and souvenirs related to Idaho and MOI exhibits.
The Village Improvement Society, a club founded by Idaho Falls women in 1898 to beautify and bring culture to the growing frontier town, secured a $15,000 grant from the Carnegie Foundation in 1913 to build a public library at Eastern Avenue and Elm Street. The Carnegie library was built between 1914 and 1916 and served the town until 1977, when the library moved into a new building. Meanwhile, the Bonneville County Historical Society (BCHS), formed in 1975, began displaying artifacts in a small room in the basement of the Bonneville County Courthouse in 1979. The BCHS lobbied to save the then-vacant library building from demolition, and raised money to transform it into the Bonneville Museum, which opened in 1985.[4]
The historic building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 as the Idaho Falls Public Library.
In 1992, in anticipation of future growth, the BCHS purchased property immediately north of the Carnegie building. In 2000, local philanthropist Greg Carr offered to donate the nearby former Masonic Temple to allow the BCHS to expand its building if they also agreed to expand its mission to include traveling exhibits and other offerings beyond Bonneville County's borders. A two-story atrium structure was built connecting the Carnegie building and the Masonic building, and the resulting institution opened in 2003 as the Museum of Idaho.
Since then, the museum has continually expanded its mission and offerings to include a wide array of educational programming. Following a capital campaign, the museum expanded yet again, opening a new traveling exhibit hall, education center, and lobby in 2019. The museum then undertook a wholesale renovation of the Carnegie and atrium buildings, which reopened with expanded Idaho exhibits in 2021.[5][6]
The museum owns permanent collections pertaining mostly to Idaho history across several disciplines, including archaeology, paleontology, and geology, as well as native inhabitants and early settlers. Museum staff curates in-house exhibits centered around these collections. The museum also houses the archaeologically significant Wasden Collection, which contains thousands of objects and fossils, including mammoth and other megafauna remains excavated from an archaeological site in the desert west of Idaho Falls.[7] Other notable artifacts include a life-size Columbian mammoth replica, a unique Revolutionary War-era American flag, the Northwest's oldest English-language monument, and remnants from the nearby National Reactor Testing Station's pioneering early research on atomic energy.
The museum's flagship permanent exhibit, "Way Out West," is divided into seven galleries:
The Marie Putnam Discovery Room includes kids' play areas relating to early settlers and natural history.
The museum houses an active collection and continues to collect artifacts, objects, documents, and photographs, as well as stories through an oral history project. The archives are open to the public and researchers by appointment. Archaeologists may submit proposals to perform research on the museum's Wasden Collection.
In addition to its Idaho exhibits, the museum hosts 1-3 special exhibits each year on a variety of themes. Most are national and international touring exhibitions.
The museum hosts school field trips from Idaho and neighboring states, and develops exhibit-related lesson plans and activities for teachers to access online. It also holds summer camps, a variety of STEM-based and history-based programs and classes, as well as continuing education courses for educators that include excursions into the Greater Yellowstone area.[10]
For adults, the museum also holds monthly "Museum After Dark" evening events, Haunted History Tours, galas, and regular public lectures on subjects in the humanities and sciences.