The History Museum is the brownish building to the right of the Maitland Art Center in this photo |
231 W. Packwood Ave.
Maitland, FL 32751
Maitland, FL 32751
407.539.2181
www.artandhistory.org
www.artandhistory.org
Waterhouse Residence
CarpentryMuseum
Telephone Museum
Maitland Historical Museum
AT A GLANCE: Maitland Museum Campus
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Date of visit
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Saturday, February 17, 2018
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Parking
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Limited free street
parking. We had to park at the far
side of the neighboring city park.
Even so, it only took a few minutes of walking to get to the Art
Museum. Additional parking at the
public library or the civic center.
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Amount of time needed
to peruse exhibits:
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45 - 60 for the five
museums on campus grounds
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Amount of time needed
for gift shop
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There is no gift shop
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The “must have”
souvenir
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Select from any of Antonio’s Wine & Spirits inventory
of specialty oils and herbs.
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Online shopping
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No.
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Kid friendly shopping
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No.
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Kid friendly
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Kids will be bored.
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Dress code
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As in West Palm Beach,
dress tastefully. You’ll feel woefully
conspicuous in “beach” clothes.
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Be sure to…..
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Remember that you are
doing your duty as an informed member of society.
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Nearby/other
establishments to visit
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Maitland Art Center
Audubon Center for
Birds of Prey
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Walkability, general
downtown area / amount of traffic
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The 4-acre campus is
walkable. However, this area of
Maitland is located away from the downtown area, and isn’t walkable. Sidewalks outside of the campus were
scarce.
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Safety, in terms of
type and number of crimes committed in general area
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Generally safe. With all of the Mercedes, Jaguars, and
BMWs, I find it tough to think someone would want to break into our car. However, lock your car, place your
valuables out of sight, and be aware of your surroundings.
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It’s not that I don’t
like history; it’s the way that museums present it that I find dull and
boring. The dank and musty smell creates
my first impression with its full-on assault of my nose as soon as I
enter. Then there’s the way that museums
create signage with too much information in order to share knowledge with the public. These posters often hang dejectedly on the
wall, in desperate groupings silently pleading for some…anyone… to pause and
read. Most of us don’t, because that
many words crowded together is overwhelming.
It’s tiring to read the minutiae detail.
Some wonder if another way to teach history exists, and I hope. However, it was business as usual at the
Maitland complex of museums. I exited the smaller museums with squinty eyes, drained
from reading small text over and over.
This proved more than I wanted to read |
This infographic contained twice the verbiage pictured here. Sure, it's interesting, but my eyes rebelled at the amount of reading. |
In my next life, I want
to discover a way to engage folks and get them excited about visiting history
museums. Yet, that’s for another time. Sadly, the Maitland Museums let a great
teaching experience slide away. Visit
the History Museum; read the posters.
Go on and visit the Telephone Museum, where I had great hope that this would be
different. It was, and it wasn’t. Not many posters to read, but the docent had
to unlock the Museum and stand there with us while we looked around. She gave us the canned speech, and left it at
that.
The original switchboard |
Early automated switchboards |
I'm good with signage like this. It's informative and to the point |
Look closely in the phone booth on the right and spot the Superman outfit hanging inside |
Historic telephones on display |
"Newer" phones come in many colors |
The inner workings of telephone communication was interesting, but required a docent to inform us about it |
Take a trip through nostalgia with an honest-to-goodness working pay phone |
It gets worse. The Carpentry Museum is an old tool shed /
workshop that appear as if a sloppy woodworker left tools scattered about as if
to return later and put them away. My
dad was a pattern maker / woodworker, and his workbench in the basement of my
childhood home had more tools than this Carpentry Museum. Make sure you stand near a source of fresh
air, because this tiny Museum is heavily encrusted with a moldy smell. Again, the docent unlocks the door and waits as
we look about. That’s three museums down
and one left to visit.
The Waterhouse Residence Museum, located on the banks of Lake Lily |
With fingers
crossed, we hiked to the Waterhouse Residence Museum. Once glance at the front porch raised a red
flag for me. If highlighting a typical
residence of the late 19th century, why have such ratty chairs on
the front porch? Letting out a fatalistic
sign, we entered. I’m happy to say that
the house lacked the distinctive old and damp funky smell. We were greeted by a docent as soon as we
entered, who wore a leather jacket. In
Florida. On an 80-degree day. We paid for a tour, and thankfully, the
docent was engaging and informative. My
sagging hopes of sharing history raised an encouraged eyebrow in
acknowledgement of our tour. Sadly, that
didn’t last. At one point in our tour, I
asked if the Waterhouse, whose home we found ourselves in, was part of the
Price-Waterhouse fame. His blank stare
prompted me to supply details.
Price-Waterhouse? As in the
accounting firm for the Academy Awards? In
his defense, Mr. Docent was younger. Of
course, I researched this question when we returned home. No, this was not that Waterhouse. Rather, this one was a highly skilled
woodworker and carpenter in the Maitland area in the 1880s, which clarified a
comment that Mr. Docent made at the beginning of our tour of the Waterhouse
residence. Located just inside of the
front door is a staircase that Mr. Waterhouse made that uses gravity to hold it
together. No nails were harmed in the
making of this staircase.
To be honest, this trip
proved difficult to share on this blog, because I sound as if the Maitland
Museums may not be worth your time. If
you look at it through the lens of an informative visit, then, perhaps it isn’t. However, consider these small museums as a
duty. That’s right. You need to make time for the 1 ½ to 2 hour journey
that is the Maitland complex of museums.
Instead of wondering why these places exist, it’s because we, as a
society, need them. They contain the
fabric of what once existed in terms that we can relate to today. We connect through shared stories and
experiences in attempts to bond. We
often begin conversations with friends and acquaintance with “Have
you ever…?” “Have you heard of…?” or “What do you think of…?” History ties
us together through shared stories and experiences.
Time for lunch. Treat yourself with lunch at Antonio’s Wine
and Spirits (http://antoniosonline.com/cafe-lunch-menu/).
Antonio’s began several years ago as a
local deli, and slowly expanded into a sit-down restaurant.
Wonderful and tasty sweets for sale |
Bob loved the vegetarian Eggplant Parmesan,
and I was enthralled with the Balsamic Chicken Sandwich.
Part of Antonio's wine section |
Antonio's is a great restaurant, deli, and grocery store |
What I really enjoyed,
though, was that on our way into the restaurant, a women enjoying and Antonio’s
lunch at the outdoor café called out to Bob:
“How did you like Houghton?” He
was proudly wearing a Michigan Tech University t-shirt, that being his alma
mater. Bob chatted with the women a bit, laughing
about the snow in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula while enjoying Florida’s mild
February day. Geographically, Michigan
is shaped like a large mitten, and I laughed, because I knew what came next.
Sure enough, they did the “hand thing” that
Michiganders oft do upon greeting others from the area. They each held their right hand up, and with
the left hand pointed to a spot on their right hand indicating where each was
from. In my opinion, we, as members of today’s society,
need to find a way to connect with folks outside of our immediate circle of
acquaintances. These two strangers found
a way to bond through shared geography.
The "Michigan Hand" |
Make a point to visit a
history museum. If in Central Florida,
visit and take advantage of Maitland, Florida’s museum campus. We know that stories connect one generation
to the next. The legacy that we inherit
is up to us to share with others. This
is one of those times when we need to step up and support the history museums
that share the very thing that makes us a polite and cultural society. Do
your bit for humanity: suck it up and
visit the Maitland Museums.
Maitland is located in Central Florida |
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