*** Welcome to piglix ***

Santa Barbara Historical Museum

Santa Barbara Historical Museum
Historical Adobe Santa Barbara.jpg
The Historic Adobe (1936)
Established 1932
Location 136 E. De la Guerra Street, Santa Barbara, California, 93101
Coordinates 34°25′17″N 119°41′53″W / 34.4214°N 119.698°W / 34.4214; -119.698Coordinates: 34°25′17″N 119°41′53″W / 34.4214°N 119.698°W / 34.4214; -119.698
Visitors

40 thousand annually (2009-2010)

  • Mission: Building a future worth remembering
  • Admission Free, Donations Appreciated
Director Lynn Brittner
Website http://www.santabarbaramuseum.com

40 thousand annually (2009-2010)

The Santa Barbara Historical Museum is located in Santa Barbara, California, U.S.. It features relics from Chumash, Spanish, Mexican, Yankee, and Chinese cultures, including artifacts, photographs, furnishings and textiles, dating as far back as the 15th century.

The Museum is located at 136 East De la Guerra in the heart of historic downtown Santa Barbara. The facility was built in 1965 by the Santa Barbara Historical Society.

In October 1932 a voluntary association was formed consisting of representatives from a number of local organizations. The Articles of Association laid out the purposes of this new group: to foster research and study of the history of the city and county of Santa Barbara; to collect, preserve, and make available materials having to do with same; and to provide for exhibition of such materials. This new association was the Santa Barbara Historical Society.

Soon after its founding, the Society was offered the “tower” room in the Santa Barbara County Courthouse as an exhibition space and the Society began to collect, catalogue, and store artifacts and documents. For the first ten years, little changed in the character of the Historical Society.

In 1942, the Society moved to establish classes of membership, admit individuals, and set up a schedule of dues. The result was a considerable increase in membership and in the acquisition of materials for collections. The next step was taken the following year when the Society incorporated under California law; on June 7, 1943 the Santa Barbara Historical Society became a California non-profit corporation.

As membership grew, Society activities increased. In 1947, the Society published its first book, China Trade Days in California by D. MacKenzie Brown, based upon the papers of Alpheus Thompson, an early prosperous Santa Barbara merchant. The Society’s growth necessitated a larger space than the courthouse tower room. Katherine Bagg Hastings offered her home, the Trussell-Winchester Adobe at 412 West Montecito Street, as a new headquarters. The house had been built in 1854 by Horatio Gates Trussell for his family. Mrs. Hastings arranged to transfer ownership of the house to the Society upon her death; this transfer took place in 1955.


...
Wikipedia

...