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DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum

DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum
DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum.jpg
Entrance, DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum at the Public Hospital of 1773
Established 1985 (1985)
Location Colonial Williamsburg, 326 West Francis Street, Williamsburg, Virginia
Type Art gallery
Visitors 250,000 (2014)
Website DWDAM

Coordinates: 37°16′7.9″N 76°42′16.6″W / 37.268861°N 76.704611°W / 37.268861; -76.704611

The DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum (DWDAM), is a museum dedicated to British and American fine and decorative arts from 1670-1840, located in Williamsburg, Virginia.

Situated just outside the historic boundary of Colonial Williamsburg, DWDAM was founded with an initial 1982 donation by DeWitt Wallace (1889–1981) and his wife Lila Bell Acheson Wallace (1889–1984) — co-founders of Reader's Digest.

The Wallaces donated $12 million to finance reconstruction of the nation's first public mental hospital, the Public Hospital of 1773 and construction of the decorative arts museum — to be connected to the hospital by an underground concourse. Having initially opened in 1985, the museum has since expanded to include the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum and will undergo another expansion to open in 2019 with a new, street-level entrance.

The museum features diverse collections related to the founding of the United States — including furniture, paintings, silver, numismatics, ceramics, tools, textiles, glass, maps, weapons, media and other objects from the permanent Colonial Williamsburg collection.

DWDAM is accessed through and underneath the Public Hospital of 1773, which commemorates the first mental health facility in the Colony of Virginia. The facility features a restaurant as well as the Hennage Auditorium, which offers lectures and musical performances.


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