This Sunday at the Coney Island Museum: "Portrait of a Dime Museum: The Niagra Falls Museum (1827-1999)," a Lecture with Collector Bill Jameison

This Father's Day Sunday: a unique opportunity to learn about about the historical, curious, and amazing Niagara Falls Museum (est. 1827) from the mouth of its new keeper, Bill Jamieson, surrounded by an assortment of astounding objects from the museum as installed in The Great Coney Island Spectacularium!This event is seriously not to be missed! Full details follow; VERY much hope to see you there!

Portrait of a Dime Museum: The Niagra Falls Museum (1827-1999)A Lecture by Historian, Museologist, and Collector Bill Jamieson, Owner of The Niagara Falls Museum CollectionLocation: The Coney Island Museum, 1208 Surf AvenueDate: Sunday, June 19Time: 1:00 PMAdmission: $5Part of the Out of the Cabinet: Tales of Strange Objects and the People Who Love Them, presented by Morbid Anatomy and Scholar in Residence Evan MichelsonIn the 19th and early 20th Centuries, popular museums--many of them charging a dime for admission, and thus often referred to as “dime museums”-- were a beloved part of the amusement landscape. In the U.S., these attractions were pioneered by Charles Willson Peale's Philadelphia Museum (est. 1784) and P. T. Barnum's American Museum (est. 1842). These early museums exhibited a dizzying array of curiosities including live menageries, animal and human freaks, taxidermy, artworks, waxworks, cosmoramas, temperance plays, trained bears, the tree under which Jesus’ disciples sat, Jenny Lind, General Tom Thumb, Chang and Eng, and Barnum’s infamous Feejee Mermaid.The Niagara Falls Museum--Canada's oldest museum--was an important early dime museum founded in 1827 and open to the public until 1999. The collection is unique for being a remarkably intact early dime museum collection, showing the kind of breadth and variety rarely seen in the museums of today. Over the course of its tenure, it was notable for hosting such wonders as the mummy of pharaoh Ramses I (repatriated in 2003), early Wild West Shows starring General Custer’s scout “Wild Bill” Hickock and local Woodland Indians, and a number of artifacts from the Pan American Exposition of 1901 including the shell and coral collection famous naturalist Dr. Louis Agassiz. It was also renowned for its strong natural history collection with a focus on local fauna and freak animals living and dead.Over its lifetime, the museum changed location and hands several times, and many collections were added or discarded. It was ultimately purchased by Bill Jamieson--a private collector in Toronto--with the hopes of one day restoring the museum to its original splendor. This year, Mr. Jamieson loaned an assortment of astounding artifacts--including 19th Century waxworks, the remains of Skipper the two-legged dog, taxidermy, Native American artifacts, and seaweed artwork-- from The Niagara Falls Museum to be exhibited as part of The Great Coney Island Spectacularium; these objects are currently on view as part of this exhibition at The Coney Island Museum through April 2012.This Father's Day afternoon, please join us at The Coney Island Museum for a unique opportunity to learn about about the historical, curious, and amazing Niagara Falls Museum surrounded by an assortment of astounding objects from the collection.Bill Jamieson is a historian, ethnologist, museologist, ancient and tribal art dealer and collector. Bill’s interests evolve around the forgotten cultures and customs of the South Pacific, Indonesian, African, South and North American Indians, and Egyptian. His fascination with artifacts from these cultures, as well as oddities and curiosities from around the globe, especially objects of the Macabre. Bill’s fieldwork amongst the Shuar in Ecuador and Peru has helped him with much knowledge of this tribal group. His expertise has been drawn upon by National Geographic’s documentary production unit for a series Headhunting, Human Sacrifice, and Cannibalism as well as by numerous museums and researchers. He has been a member of the Canadian Chapter of the New York Explorers Club since 1997. Bill is active in loaning and donating to such Toronto institutions as the Royal Ontario Museum and Art Gallery of Ontario. Bill is presently working on a pilot for a series for History Television.

Joining the freedom flotilla to break Gaza blockade is a necessity – Sydney Morning Herald


Bahrain News Agency
Joining the freedom flotilla to break Gaza blockade is a necessity
Sydney Morning Herald
For those who choose to look, they can learn how Israel's refusal to allow exports to leave or spare parts and raw materials to enter Gaza means that the electricity supply is unreliable, medical equipment unrepairable, refrigeration dicey, ...
Bringing freedom to GazaIllawara Mercury (blog)
French rally to support Flotilla 2Press TV

all 24 news articles »

TODAY at the Coney Island Museum: "Portrait of a Dime Museum: The Niagra Falls Museum (1827-1999)," a Lecture with Collector Bill Jameison

Today! Hope to see you at this lecture about the historical, curious, and amazing Niagara Falls Museum (est. 1827) from the mouth of its new keeper, Bill Jamieson, surrounded by an assortment of astounding objects from the museum as installed in The Great Coney Island Spectacularium!And a very special thanks is due to my good friend Mike Zohn of Obscura Antiques and Oddities and TV's Oddities for introducing us to Bill and for making both our exhibition--and this lecture--possible! We hope very much to see him there today.Full details follow; VERY much hope to see you there!

Portrait of a Dime Museum: The Niagra Falls Museum (1827-1999)A Lecture by Historian, Museologist, and Collector Bill Jamieson, Owner of The Niagara Falls Museum CollectionLocation: The Coney Island Museum, 1208 Surf AvenueDate: Sunday, June 19Time: 1:00 PMAdmission: $5Part of the Out of the Cabinet: Tales of Strange Objects and the People Who Love Them SeriesIn the 19th and early 20th Centuries, popular museums--many of them charging a dime for admission, and thus often referred to as “dime museums”-- were a beloved part of the amusement landscape. In the U.S., these attractions were pioneered by Charles Willson Peale's Philadelphia Museum (est. 1784) and P. T. Barnum's American Museum (est. 1842). These early museums exhibited a dizzying array of curiosities including live menageries, animal and human freaks, taxidermy, artworks, waxworks, cosmoramas, temperance plays, trained bears, the tree under which Jesus’ disciples sat, Jenny Lind, General Tom Thumb, Chang and Eng, and Barnum’s infamous Feejee Mermaid.The Niagara Falls Museum--Canada's oldest museum--was an important early dime museum founded in 1827 and open to the public until 1999. The collection is unique for being a remarkably intact early dime museum collection, showing the kind of breadth and variety rarely seen in the museums of today. Over the course of its tenure, it was notable for hosting such wonders as the mummy of pharaoh Ramses I (repatriated in 2003), early Wild West Shows starring General Custer’s scout “Wild Bill” Hickock and local Woodland Indians, and a number of artifacts from the Pan American Exposition of 1901 including the shell and coral collection famous naturalist Dr. Louis Agassiz. It was also renowned for its strong natural history collection with a focus on local fauna and freak animals living and dead.Over its lifetime, the museum changed location and hands several times, and many collections were added or discarded. It was ultimately purchased by Bill Jamieson--a private collector in Toronto--with the hopes of one day restoring the museum to its original splendor. This year, Mr. Jamieson loaned an assortment of astounding artifacts--including 19th Century waxworks, the remains of Skipper the two-legged dog, taxidermy, Native American artifacts, and seaweed artwork-- from The Niagara Falls Museum to be exhibited as part of The Great Coney Island Spectacularium; these objects are currently on view as part of this exhibition at The Coney Island Museum through April 2012.This Father's Day afternoon, please join us at The Coney Island Museum for a unique opportunity to learn about about the historical, curious, and amazing Niagara Falls Museum surrounded by an assortment of astounding objects from the collection.Bill Jamieson is a historian, ethnologist, museologist, ancient and tribal art dealer and collector. Bill’s interests evolve around the forgotten cultures and customs of the South Pacific, Indonesian, African, South and North American Indians, and Egyptian. His fascination with artifacts from these cultures, as well as oddities and curiosities from around the globe, especially objects of the Macabre. Bill’s fieldwork amongst the Shuar in Ecuador and Peru has helped him with much knowledge of this tribal group. His expertise has been drawn upon by National Geographic’s documentary production unit for a series Headhunting, Human Sacrifice, and Cannibalism as well as by numerous museums and researchers. He has been a member of the Canadian Chapter of the New York Explorers Club since 1997. Bill is active in loaning and donating to such Toronto institutions as the Royal Ontario Museum and Art Gallery of Ontario. Bill is presently working on a pilot for a series for History Television.

Calamities of (super)nature | Bad Astronomy

Calamities of Nature is a webcomic that frequently has skeptical and scientifiic themes. A recent one deals with ghosts and the soul, and it hits on a message I’ve said many times: there’s no such thing as the supernatural. Either something is natural — that is, part of the Universe — or else it doesn’t exist.

If you posit some thing that has no perceivable or measurable effect, then it may as well not exist. And as soon as you claim it does have an effect — it can be seen, heard, recorded, felt — then it must be in some way testable, and therefore subject to science. You can’t claim ghosts are supernatural, beyond the realm of science, but also claim they show up on a freaking thermal camera!

Well, you can claim that, but you’d be wrong. So there you go.

[NOTE: In a funny coincidence, after I drafted this post but before I published it, my fellow Hive Overmind blogger Sean Carroll posted a link to this same cartoon using almost exactly the same post title! COINCIDENCE? Well, yeah, actually. Great minds and ...


Macarthur MP Russell Matheson meets Dalai Lama – Macarthur Chronicle Campbelltown


Macarthur Chronicle Campbelltown
Macarthur MP Russell Matheson meets Dalai Lama
Macarthur Chronicle Campbelltown
“I didn't go there to seek enlightenment but a lot of what he said was about doing your best for others and about what you can do for your community,” Mr Matheson said. “I will be taking that on board in what I do.” The Dalai Lama had missed out on an ...

and more »

Rockstar Island

rockstar-island-1A unique Canadian island with an even more unique name, Rockstar island is a 1.21 acre island located in Ontario’s presitigious Pointe au Baril region.   Unique rock formations, windswept pines and a protected harbor round this package out perfectly.

The 3 bedroom main cottage is ideally situated to maximize the unobstructed westerly views and leave ample smooth granite untouched. It also has a small separate sleeping cabin which is perfect for guests.

The main cottage has been impeccably maintained and was designed with an abundance of windows and glass doors, which fill the cottage with natural light. Generous decks and an enclosed verandah surround the cottage allowing you to enjoy the sunset from inside or out in the spring, summer or fall.

The island is currently on the market for $1,195,000. For more informationon this property visit Private Islands Online.

SLS Decision Soon?

NASA selects new heavy-lift rocket, say sources, Space.com

"Under the plan, awaiting approval by the White House Office of Management and Budget, initial flights of the SLS would utilize the solid-rocket motors, developed by ATK Aerospace Systems of Magna, Utah. ATK is under contract to develop an advanced version of the space shuttle solid-rocket booster under NASA's now-defunct Constellation program. Among the companies that have expressed interested in developing an advanced kerosene-fueled engine are Aerojet of Sacramento, Calif., Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) of Hawthorne, Calif., and Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne of Canoga Park, Calif. This engine might eventually replace the solid-fueled motors on SLS, sources said."

More Irrational Science Funding Cuts

I've been assured that there is no Antiscience sentiment in the U.S., so I'm sure there is a very rational explanation as to why we would risk lives and degrade our ability to predict the weather to save a billion dollars. I mean, does this cut make more sense than cutting defense by 0.2% instead (6

Far Away Load

I have a 500kW/380V LV Load in a distance of 700m.

Instead of buying step up and step down transformer, including all MV panels needed, i'm thinking of using 1 transformer, maybe 380/440V, so that they still can get 380V at the end of the line. Cost of losses can be neglected, as they are a coal mi

What Ever Happened to the Cartwheel Space Station?

For as long as I can remember, nearly all the artwork and references I've ever seen or read in science fiction books depicted our future space stations as being shaped like a giant spoked wheel, which would provide centrifugal "gravity" upon completion. But as soon as we got a chance to actually bui

DIY Plastic Extruder

I came across this video, and I know there are lots of people on CR4 interested in building their own positive manufacturing equipment... so I think this will be of interest to them.

enjoy

Chris