Advantages Educational, quirky, Victorian, kinda gross
Disadvantages Gross, expensive
Detailed Rating
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For every interest; for every hobby, there is a museum. There is a lawnmower museum, a penis museum (I kid you not), a museum of bad art, along with the more mainstream art, natural history and science museums. Many museums include interactive displays – buttons to push, levers to turn. Some, however, have remained resolutely Victorian. The displays are in dimly lit rooms, and in cases of mahogany and glass. The Mütter Museum in Philadelphia can safely be called both Victorian and quirky, yet is still educational, in a slightly morbid way.
The museum is within walking distance from Suburban Station (one of three main rail stations in Philadelphia – unusually, all trains seem to go through all three stations), at 19 South 22nd Street. It is not a large museum, and it shares its premises with the College of Physicians, so only takes up a small portion of the rather stately building. Upon entering the rather grand foyer, you pay your money ($14 a person), you must check any bags (including rucksacks), and you are told photography is strictly prohibited inside the museum (though you can photograph the foyer). Heading towards the back, past the grand staircase, you’ll see a little entrance – that’s where you need to go.
Moving downstairs, the first two things you’ll probably notice are the plaster casts of the conjoined twins that gave the condition the name Siamese Twins, Chang and Eng Bunker. There is also a large case containing three complete skeletons – one of a normal man, one of a ‘dwarf’ woman, and one of a ‘giant’ man. The cases are arranged both along the walls and in the centre of the room, so whilst the museum isn’t huge, you could spend a happy, if gruesome couple of hours in there, especially if you investigate the drawers (which you may open) of stuff that has been removed from people’s stomachs, digestive tracts and tracheas (and pretty much anywhere else you can get buttons, pins and the like stuck). It is also down here you’ll find the foetuses in jars (most of which are terribly abnormal with hideous malformations). If that’s a bit too morbid for you, you can marvel at the intestine of the chap who died essentially of constipation. It is, as you can imagine, very large and distended.
The museum isn’t perfect. It is quite compact but they cram so much into many of the displays that the signage is often quite basic and poor. They try to make up for this with an audio option; however, this is available through your mobile phone. You are given a number to call, which would, I imagine, talk you through what you are looking at. As I was visiting from the UK with a UK mobile phone, I declined to spend a small fortune on this. Some signs are there, but some are located either very high up or low down, or are blocked by the frames of the cases (remember, these are Victorian cases so don’t have the single expanse of glass you see nowadays) that they are nearly illegible.
The museum is expensive for its size. I do realise, though, that such a museum must take a fair amount of maintenance, and you do hope that your money is going to a good cause, attached to the Philadelphia College of Physicians.The Mütter Museum is not for the squeamish, and I probably wouldn’t take very young children there. If you have an interest in science, medicine and indeed the past, though, you will find it an entertaining and educational couple of hours. It’s not a place I’d visit every time I went to Philadelphia, but I’d certainly recommend it as a quirky diversion, with more education value than simply running up the Rocky steps (especially if you don’t bother to visit the art museum once you’d achieved the top).
Mütter Museum, Philadelphia - from the outside
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supercityfan 19/02/2011 17:39
Novabug 11/11/2010 23:51
dbuk2000 31/10/2010 16:54
Spottydog11 25/10/2010 19:06
Violet1278 25/10/2010 17:16
Very well reviewed. Has rather a strange selection of things there I think! E from me.
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Mutter Museum: Historic Medical Photographs - College of Physicians of Philadelphia Pages: 223, Hardcover, Blast Books,U.S. |
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