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This list of music museums offers a guide to museums worldwide that specialize in the domain of music. These institutions are dedicated to the preservation and exhibition of music-related history, including the lives and works of prominent musicians, the evolution and variety of musical instruments, and other aspects of the world of music.
Kelton House Museum and Garden: Downtown Historic house: Showcases Victorian life and the history of the Underground Railroad: Museum of Biological Diversity Ohio State University campus Natural history Teaching collection, including insects, crustacea, fishes, molluscs, animal and plant specimens [8] Museum of Classical Archaeology
Pages in category "Musical instrument museums in the United States" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
It was through this association, and the association with Arthur Quimby, an organist at the Cleveland Museum of Art, that Walter's work began its movement away from a more orchestral oriented organ of the early 1930s, best suited to homophonic music, towards an instrument that would render clear polyphony. Walter Henry Holtkamp Sr.
Musical instrument museums in the United States (17 P) A. Music museums in Alabama (3 P) Music museums in Arkansas (1 P) C. ... Morris Museum; Museum of Pop Culture; N.
Logan is the home of the Columbus Washboard Company, the only remaining washboard manufacturing company in the U.S. Washboards continue to be used as instruments of laundry today in some parts of the world and serve decoratively in many homes. The Washboard Music Festival celebrates the washboard's role as the source of "toe-tappin’" rhythm ...
Merry - Go - Round museum, non-operational. Bronson Collection, Michigan Private Collection, DesPlaines, Il Chris Carlisle Collection, Missouri, "Hot Lips Hoolihan" from Paul Eakins Collection # 105 (Note: Two completely different instruments were given the model designation 105 by Wurlitzer.
The Martin Luther King Jr. Performing and Cultural Arts Complex is a historic building in the King-Lincoln Bronzeville neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio.It was built in 1925 as the Pythian Temple and James Pythian Theater, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places and Columbus Register of Historic Properties in 1983.