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General Information
McKissick Museum is
located at the
heart of the historic Horseshoe on the Columbia campus of the
University of South Carolina. It was established
in 1976 by the University Board of Trustees to bring together
under one roof the many object collections housed in various
departments and colleges throughout campus. These
collections date back to 1801 and provide insight into the
long and illustrious history of the University. McKissick Museum is
accredited by the American Association of Museums, operating
within their guidelines for the proper care and safekeeping of
these historical artifacts.
The building itself is a Works Progress
Administration structure erected in 1939 as the University's
library. It stands on the site of the first president's
house built on the Horseshoe and removed to make room
for the library building in 1937. A plaque commemorating
the house lies in front of McKissick Museum at the edge of the
grass bordering the plaza in front of the building.
The Museum has an
advisory board
consisting of University and community individuals dedicated
to the welfare and promotion of McKissick's endeavors.
In 1980 McKissick Museum created a
membership program
to offer special advantages to its loyal, returning visitors.
A nationally recognized graduate program, the
Museum Management
Certificate Program,
is taught on-site and offered through the COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES' Public History
Program. On average about twenty-five graduate
students, in various stages of their academic progress, are
enrolled in the certificate program.
Currently the Museum has two main galleries located on the second floor of the building, a natural history gallery on the third floor, and the small gallery of Baruch Silver located within the space of the University's Visitor Center on the first floor
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