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Berkshire Museum

Berkshire Museum
Berkshire Museum 2013.jpg
Established 1903 (1903)
Location Pittsfield, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, United States
Coordinates 42°26′50″N 73°15′13″W / 42.4473°N 73.2536°W / 42.4473; -73.2536Coordinates: 42°26′50″N 73°15′13″W / 42.4473°N 73.2536°W / 42.4473; -73.2536
Type
Collections Fossils, meteorites, ancient Egyptian mummy, Babylonian art
Director Van Shields
Website www.berkshiremuseum.org

The Berkshire Museum is a museum of art, natural history and ancient civilization that is located in Pittsfield, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, United States.

In 1903, Berkshire Museum founder Zenas Crane, inspired by such institutions as the American Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, decided to blend the best attributes of these establishments in a new museum for the people of Western Massachusetts. Thanks in large part to Crane’s efforts, the broad and varied collections of Berkshire Museum include objects from virtually every continent, from important fine art and sculpture to natural science specimens and ancient artifacts.

As the third-generation owner of Crane & Company, a paper manufacturer that was (and continues to be) the official supplier of paper to the U.S. Treasury, Crane invested his wealth in his community. He actively sought out art and artifacts for Berkshire Museum, and encouraged the development of collections that would bring home to the Berkshires a wide cross-section of the world’s wonders. Berkshire Museum became a “window on the world.”

Crane purchased many of Berkshire Museum’s first acquisitions, including a sizable group of paintings from the revered Hudson River School. Significant works by Albert Bierstadt and Frederic Edwin Church figure prominently in the collection.

The diverse collections also boast artifacts of ancient history and natural science: fossil collections, a 143-pound meteorite, an ancient Egyptian mummy named Pahat, shards of Babylonian cuneiform tablets, samplings of early Mediterranean jewelry, and representations of Berkshire ecosystems including local mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, insects, plants, and minerals.


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