Once again we found ourselves playing tourist at a museum we had had nearly two decades to explore when we lived locally, but never found the time.
On our swing through Connecticut we finally visited The Carousel Museum in Bristol.
Much like the carousel exhibit we saw at the Shelburne Museum in Vermont, seeing the pieces of a carousel separated and displayed turned them into art.
The museum was established in 1990 with a focus on preserving this vanishing piece of Americana. Besides the several rooms of carousel displays, they also have an active restoration program, both for pieces intended for their museum, and work for carousels elsewhere.
Additionally, the museum has an education program, and also hosts parties and weddings.
There is a functioning historic carousel (the 1914 Bushnell Park Carousel) in the museum, but it operates now for “children only,” and being a “child at heart” doesn’t make the cut.
There were two additional “museums” included with the ticket price, though they were less “museum-y.” The Museum of Fire History is a small gallery with a very large collection of fire-related items on display, but few labels or educational interpretation. The collection was assembled by a local businessman who had an interest in firefighter paraphernalia.
There was also a Museum of Greek and Hellenic History set in a “Parthenon room” with elaborate ancient Greek façade and interior. There were a few displays of small-scale ancient Greek works in this room.
The Fire Museum and Parthenon room aside, we both enjoyed the many elaborately decorated menagerie of animals.