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The Glore Psychiatric Museum is part of a complex of St. Joseph, Missouri, museums, along with the Black Archives Museum, the St. Joseph Museum, and the American Indian and History Galleries. The Glore exhibits feature the 130-year history of the adjacent state mental hospital, and illustrate the history of mental health treatment through the ...
St. Joseph is a city in Andrew and Buchanan counties and the county seat of Buchanan County, Missouri, ... This was the start of the Glore Psychiatric Museum.
Pages in category "Museums in St. Joseph, Missouri" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. ... Glore Psychiatric Museum; J. Jesse James Home ...
This list of museums in Missouri encompasses museums which are defined for this context as institutions (including non-profit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
It seems a strange item to have in an article with this title - but if this is an exhibit, then it deserves it's place, I suppose. The reflection on the cabinet glass doesn't help. I see that the original flickr poster refers to it as the "St. Joseph Glore Psychiatric Museum".Martinevans123 14:45, 28 June 2014 (UTC)
The Glore Psychiatric Museum in Saint Joseph, Missouri has a 1910 exhibit with "an imaginative starburst arrangement of 1,446 buttons, screws, bolts, and nails that were eaten by a patient who died unexpectedly. They were only discovered during her autopsy."
The Jesse James Home Museum is the house in St. Joseph, Missouri where outlaw Jesse James was living and was gunned down on April 3, 1882, by Robert Ford. It is a one-story, Greek Revival style frame dwelling measuring 24 feet, 2 inches, wide and 30 feet, 4 inches, deep. [2] At the time, the house was located at 1318 Lafayette Street in St ...
The district encompasses 248 contributing buildings in a predominantly residential section of St. Joseph. It developed between about 1860 and 1942, and includes representative examples of Italianate , Second Empire , Queen Anne , Tudor Revival , American Foursquare , and Bungalow / American Craftsman style architecture.