New England Pirate Museum

New England Pirate Museum (Salem, Massachusetts)

The Mourner recommends this museum: “I had the opportunity to go to the Pirate Museum in Salem, MA (yes, the Witch Trials Salem, the place is full of tourist type stuff like that, including a Witch Dungeon similar to the one used centuries ago). Anyway, they had many other pirate flags and histories, mostly centered around New England. And of all the historical sites I saw there, it was the goriest. I loved it.”

 

National Museum of Civil War Medicine

National Museum of Civil War Medicine (Frederick, Maryland)
I went to this museum back in 2001, but I couldn’t do a travelogue on it because they did not allow me to take pictures. I can tell you that it is an interesting place to visit, with dioramas depicting injured soldiers and the techniques that were used to tend to the them. There are lots of scary looking old amputation kits, as well as stories and photos of injured individuals. Recommended.

 

New Orleans Pharmacy Museum

New Orleans Pharmacy Museum (New Orleans, Louisiana)

514 Chartres Street
New Orleans, Louisiana
March 7, 2002

One of the lesser known, but still rather interesting, sites to see in New Orleans is the Pharmacy Museum. The museum is housed in a vintage 1850’s apothecary that has beautiful mahogany cabinets and an interesting collection of 19th century medicine. Although there really isn’t a whole lot to see for your $5.00, if you’re interested in 19th century medicine, it’s a must.

One of the highlights of the pharmacy is this wonderful 1855 soda fountain. From the museum’s website: “Soda fountains originated in pharmacies in the 1830’s. Pharmacists would mix phosphates and flavorings with bitter tasting medicines to make them more palatable. Eventually customers wanted the drinks without the medicine, hence the development of soft drinks. Crushed ice and salt were used to cool the mineral, soda and seltzer waters which were dispensed through brass faucets to create a nectar soda or the fruit phosphates favored by New Orleanians of that time.”

The mahogany cabinets, filled with vintage medications, are amazing too. They don’t make things like this anymore!

But the real fun is in the details – reading the outlandish, completely medically unproven pronouncements on the boxes and bottles, and looking at some of the grim collection of early pharmaceutical supplies. I was especially fond of the lead nipple shields: “Nipple shields were produced in lead, pewter and silver as early as 1820. The lead shields were advertised as soothing to the mother’s breast through the creation of lead lactate.” Say what???

Notice the baby bottle with the lead nipple too. “Prior to the invention of rubber or plastic, lead was used in the manufacture of baby nipples. The sweet taste of lead would encourage the child to feed, however, the long-term affects of lead poisoning were not understood. Prolonged exposure to lead may cause loss of appetite, headache, anaemia, vomiting, incoordination, paralysis, elevated blood pressure, cranial nerve paralysis, convulsions, and coma.”

Ah, the good old days!

Anyone have any additional stories, tidbits or photos to add?
If so, by all means, write me!

 

International Museum Of Surgical Science

International Museum Of Surgical Science (Chicago, Illinois)
Comtesse Travelogue through the morbid memorabilia in Chicago’s lovely lakeshore museum.

The International Museum of Surgical Science is located along Lake Shore Drive, just across from Lake Michigan, in the Gold Coast neighborhood of lovely Chicago. The museum is housed in what was once the residence of Eleanor Robinson Countiss, the daughter of a Diamond Match Executive. Obviously, Daddy wanted “only the best” for his little girl. Of course, when the house was constructed in 1917, nobody could foresee that one day all manner of surgical implement would be stored in these hallowed halls. But that’s exactly what happened when the building fell into the surgeon’s hands of Dr. Max Thorek and the International College of Surgeons in 1950. The museum opened in 1954 and continues to this day.I visited the museum on April 7, 2004 and found it to make for a very interesting stroll. A bit low-key on the morbidity scale, but there is still enough to keep the morbid mind happy. Here’s a snippet of what I saw…

As you approach the building, the first notable sight is this cool sculpture by French artist Edouard Chaissing entitled “Hope and Help” which depicts a physician propping up a sickly patient. Too bad they don’t sell reproductions of it at the gift shop…
Another shot of the entrance to the museum. The building was modeled after Le Petit Trianon at Versailles, incidentally. I’m sure that means something to someone!
One of the best things about the museum is the wonderful collection of large-scale medical paintings, most of which are very morbid in nature. Many of them, like this one, are by Gregorio Calvi di
Bergolo and were painted in 1953. This one is called “Life, Labor, Study, Charity, Death” and symbolizes the five phases of life. This one is pretty cool, but they get much, much better, as you’ll see.
There is also a fascinating collection of medical antiquities on display, including this Peruvian stone which has a very anatomically detailed etching of a heart on it. One wonders how they acquired the hearts to study… Or at least, I do!
There are also some nice reproductions of vintage doctor/dentist offices. Here’s a well-done old dentist office. I’d really rather not get any closer, if that’s okay with you…
Here’s a reproduction of a 19th century apothecary which was created from two pharmacies originally located in upstate New York and Iowa. Ooooh, I LOVE vintage pharmacies!! Just reading the labels on the medication can be ever so much fun!!!
Another shot of the pharmacy.
Even the pharmacist is well-done in this fine museum. Look at him – doesn’t he look like he’s in the process of misprescribing laudanum for quinine right now?
There are some nice displays that you can get up close and personal with, such as this collection of pill boxes. Can you guess which one caught my attention?
Yep, you guessed it!! The “Blue Ointment” box has a particular allure, don’t you think? I wish I could have one of those at home too…

Here’s some of the fun-filled medicine boxes. Oh, be still my arcane morbid heart!! Such great fun: “Blood Medicine,” “Jerome’s New Discovery For Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels,”
“Wheeler’s Nerve Vita-Lixer”. So much quackery, so little time!

Okay, now that we’ve seen the pharmacy, it’s time to indulge in a gallery of some of the marvelous morbid artwork. The one in the foreground is a depiction of “Primitive Trephining” in
prehistoric Peru.
Here is one of the galleries of historic medical paintings.
And some more.
Most of these murals were painted in 1953 by Gregorio Calvi di Bergolo to illustrate the historical achievements in surgery and medicine. Here’s a close-up of one of my favorites as the learned doctor and his students discuss a particularly pale corpse. (It’s entitled “Anatomy Lesson”.)
Here, it appears that a group of doctors are discussing the particulars of a nasty case of consumption, or something. It seems that death is entering the room, doesn’t it? Or is that just me again? (Actually, it’s entitled “Ephraim McDowell” and dpicts Mr. McDowell domstrating the technique of ovariotomy. I like my version better.)
Damned flash disrupted the beauty of this snippet of a composition, which, if I were the artist, I would entitle, “Raw Meat”. (It’s actually called “Anesthesia”.)
And then there’s my personal favorite – the old-fashioned amputation! I would love to have a copy of this one in my household – wouldn’t you? (“Early Amputation”)
After leaving the murals, I was instantly engrossed by this vintage iron lung, which is used to illustrate the damage that polio used to wreak on the populace prior to immunization programs.
Can you imagine having to eek out an existence in one of these? What would one do to pass the time??? I don’t even want to consider it…
There’s also a room full of life-sized sculptures of the founders of modern medicine. The only one that I found particularly entrancing was this one of Vesalius (1514-1564)… for obvious reasons.
This was definitely my favorite room in the mansion – the wonderfully ornate library! Of course, it’s decked-up with an extensive collection of vintage medical textbooks. Oh, what a lovely time I would have in this reading room!
Here’s a view of the other side of the library.
Here’s another lovely mural in the hall, this one depicting a c-section. I suspect one of the first ever, although I didn’t bother to record the details of this picture or its author.
Another great thing about the museum is the collection of medical equipment. Here’s a cabinet full of trephining equipment (ie. drilling a hole in the skull to reduce pressure on the brain, or just for the heck of it).
Here’s some more lovely artwork – this one seems to be showing how ether was administered as an early anesthetic for early surgeries, and how early surgeries attracted perverts of all ages. (Anything to see under a woman’s dress, don’t you know.)
Here’s another similar masterpiece, showing the use of chloroform. Notice how when a man is having the surgery, there aren’t nearly as many men standing around watching? I rest my case…
The museum also has a nice reproduction of this Rembrandt masterpiece entitled “Anatomy
Lesson
“.
This display illustrates how chloroform inhalers were used: “A layer of gauze was placed over the inhaler and clamped in place. The anesthetists placed several drops of chloroform on to the gauze.
The mask was then placed over the patient’s face. The patient was asked to inhale deeply.” And, hopefully, they survived this inexact science!
Of course, I had to take a picture of this drawing which shows a man with a rather prodigious case of elephantiasis of the testicles.
There are some examples of early x-rays hanging about as well, such as this child’s x-ray taken by Chicago’s own x-ray pioneer Emil Grubbé in 1910.
I found the x-ray equipment displays to be particularly interesting. Here’s a case full of early x-ray tubes and plates.
Here’s one of my favorite bits of medical insanity – the x-ray shoe fitter! Yes, back in the ’40’s and ’50’s the shoe-fitting x-ray unit was a common shoe store sales promotion device. Ah, the fun
we used to have with radiation before we knew better! (More info on this device is available here.)
Here are a couple more early x-rays.
This creepy looking device is an early x-ray machine – specifically, a Wantz Interrupterless X-ray Transformer which was used by Dr. Emil Grubbé in 1907. Wouldn’t this be a nifty conversation
piece in the living room?
Another shot of the Wantz Interrupterless X-ray Transformer, taken from the side. “Oooh, I wonder what this knob does??”
There is also a delightful collection of ancient Peruvian skulls that depict the art of “trephination” – drilling holes in the skull – in graphic detail, along with some of the trephining
instruments. Amazingly enough, healing of the skull shows that people actually survived this ancient surgery.
I found this collection of gallstones, kidney stones, bladder stones, etc. to be quite fascinating as well. Who would think that they could be so pretty? Some of them look more like pearls than anything produced from a human body.
Among the eclectic collections in the museum is this copy of Napoleon’s death mask in a suitably regal case.
These wicked looking things are actually vaginal speculums and catheters from the Roman era. Pretty nifty looking instruments, but I’m sure glad I didn’t have them used on me!
Here are more ancient Roman surgical instruments. They also have some nasty looking amputation equipment, like this saw which probably dates from the 19th century. I wonder how many limbs this thing severed? This is a very nice amputation set from the 1800-1850 era. Again, imagine the stories that the saw could tell… I took a particular liking to these before and after images of girls suffering from osteological deformities, which purport to show the miraculous results of using the “bone crusher” treatment.
And here is the “bone crusher” itself: “Osteoclasts, or bone crushers, were used during the early 1900s to produce intentional fractures in the limbs of children with birth deformities. The bone
crusher applied pressure to the deformed bones, fracturing them in a controlled manner and then reset the fractured bones allowing them to heal correctly.” Oh, my limbs ache just thinking of it!!!
And where there are bone crushers, there must surely be artificial limbs! A nice assortment of them, in fact. Another view of the assorted limbs. And with one last loving look at a surgical kit, it was time to bid the museum adieu.

 

 

Amelia Island Museum of History

Amelia Island Museum of History (Amelia Island, Florida)
Nigel Tufnel (yes, I assume it’s THE Nigel Tufnel!) recommends a visit to the allegedly haunted Old Jail on Amelia Island, Florida. The Old Jail now houses the Amelia Island Museum of History, but it’s the Legend that is of interest to us fans of morbidity:
“Luc Simone Aury was the bastard son of a pirate named Luis Aury. He was a renowned scoundrel and wanted for many crimes such as murder, rape, and robbery to name a few. Upon his capture, Aury was sentenced to hang in the gallows behind the jail. As word spread, a huge crowd gathered to witness the execution of this famous criminal. The night before the hanging however, Aury managed to slit his own throat in effort to deprive the city of his humiliating spectacle. A surgeon was summoned to crudely stitch him up just enough to keep him alive until the execution. With his collar buttoned to hide the wound, he was drug up the steps on his appointed day. When the trap was sprung, the stitches ripped open, nearly decapitating him. Blood spewed into and all over the crowd. Women fainted, men screamed, and children were trampled as the crowd fled in terror. Aury can be heard moaning where the old gallows used to be. On rare occasions, his ghost will appear with a gaping slash across his neck covered in blood.”

 

National Museum of Health and Medicine

The National Museum Of Health & Medicine (Washington, D.C.)
A Comtesse Travelogue!

Here’s my journey to one of the finest morbid sights in the country – a place where you can see The Bullet That Killed Lincoln, Civil War General Sickles’ fractured tibia and fibula, and sundry other gruesome and fascinating sights! A must-see for the morbidly minded!

American Freaks!

The National Museum Of Health And Medicine
Washington, D.C. – June 18, 2001

The National Museum Of Health And Medicine
6900 Georgia Avenue and Elder St., NW
Washington D.C. 20307-5001 4506

Websitehttp://www.medicalmuseum.mil/

You know, after visiting Philadelphia’s magnificent Mütter Museum, I had thought that it would be a very long time coming before I would again experience its lofty heights of morbidity and freakiness. However, only four days later, I was privileged to walk through the hallowed halls of the National Musem Of Health And Medicine: America’s shrine to death, disfigurement, disability, disease, and all-around dysfunction. And, although the Mütter Museum does possess that certain je ne sais quois that sets it apart from all others as the foremost Disturbing Museum of America, the NMHM comes awfully close to equaling its macabre canon. And, in many ways, I found the Museum Of Health & Medicine to be even more enticing than its Philadelphian counterpart: such historical must-see’s as the Bullet That Killed Lincoln, General Sickles’ tibia, and numerous other Civil War casualties, all presented with excellent documentation, make this an absolute must-see for the morbidly minded. So, let me share with you a smattering of the more macabre displays in this most disturbing delight.

But first, let me share the tale of earlier in the day. We left Gettysburg, PA early in the morning and drove to Frederick, Maryland, where I was eager to visit the Museum Of Civil War Medicine. However, I was most dismayed to find that they were extremely strict in their “No Photography” philosophy. How annoying is that? First the Mütter Museum, now this one. Well, all I have to say is that you really aren’t missing out on much by my not being able to take pictures there. The museum was a bit of a rip-off, especially in comparison to the glories of the free and photos-allowed National Museum of Health and Medicine. Most of the exhibits consisted of mannequins dressed in Civil War costumes and supposedly tending to other “wounded” mannequins. There wasn’t much in the way of gore or war debris. In fact, the most interesting thing about the place was actually the bookstore, where you could buy “Embalming The Dead” t-shirts and coffee cups. We were pretty happy to be on our way to bigger and much better things.

The National Museum Of Health And Medicine is located in the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, in northern Washington D.C. But if you go there, don’t make the mistake that we made: we must have circled through every sidestreet in the entire (quite large) complex looking for the damned museum. It was interesting seeing all of the old brick buildings in the complex, and I was enjoying reflecting on the fact that there are still tissue samples from victims of the 1918 flu and smallpox epidemics lurking in some dark cabinets somewhere in the vicinity, but after a couple of times circling about it got a bit old. Of course, as is always the case, the museum was actually located close to the entrance – we just went the wrong way when we came in. Duh…

Since this is a National Museum, admittance is free: it basically belongs to the American people. But there’s no flash photography allowed, and in the low-lighting conditions some of my pictures didn’t turn out the best. But hopefully they’ll give you an idea of the macabre delights lurking in this building. So what are we waiting for? Let’s get morbid!


This is the first Fascinating Thing that we stumbled across. At this computer terminal, you can use the roller ball to zoom through cross-section views of a real human cadaver. From head to toe. Obviously, we were captivated.

The museum holds a large collection of antique medical instruments as well. I found this chimpanzee microscope, circa 1850, quite lovely.

This is The Most Important Display in the museum: articles from the Assassination of President Lincoln. Clockwise, from left, we have a lock of Lincoln’s hair, removed from the site of the wound; fragments of Lincoln’s skull, removed at autopsy; a bloody bandage used on Lincoln’s head; the bullet that killed Lincoln; the pick used by the doctor to extricate the bullet; and more skull fragments removed at autopsy. I spent a few long moments staring down at these sad reminders…

This is one of the many fascinating Civil War Injuries exhibits that put the Museum Of Civil War Medicine to shame. This one illustrates how they used to repair injuries to arm bones back in the day. You see, the old Civil War bullets were enormously damaging to bones – causing them to fragment mercilessly. If the surrounding vascular tissue remained viable, they would simply remove the bone, and leave the tissue. So, you ended up with men like this fella – who has an arm, but no humerus, so his upper arm just flops about with no support. Bizarre, huh?

This is a portion of the upper arm bone of Private Keggereis: “Private J. P. Kegerreis… was wounded at Petersburg, Virginia on June 17th, 1864 by a minie ball. The ball entered his neck, punctured his windpipe and passed through his right shoulder joint. Keggereis was tagged for amputation at the field hospital but tore off the tag and crawled among the less seriously wounded. Three days later, while at City Point Hospital, his wound was treated and found filled with maggots. His neck wound healed in a month, but his shoulder wound became infected. In the winter of 1865, the infected bone was removed by excision (top of picture at left). The wound healed slowly and he was discharged in May of 1866. In December of 1867, a surgeon removed a large piece of bone from the joint and the bones of the arm later fused on a semi-flexed position. He was able to lift 135 pounds with his injured arm.”

This was my personal “favorite” of the Civil War injuries – a bullet lodged right between the eyes:
“Corporal G. W. Stone… was wounded at Fredericksburg, Virginia on December 13th, 1862, when a conoidal ball penetrated his right eye and lodged behind his left eye. His only exterior symptoms were a small wound to the lid of his right eye and the slight protuberance of his left eye. His left eye continued to function normally and Corporal Stone complained only of a slight headache. The wound to his right eye healed well and within three weeks, he was allowed to walk about the city with a hospital pass. Suddenly on February 6th, 1863, he developed chills. Fever and delirium followed. He died at midnight on February 15th, 1863.”

Another grim Civil War injury:
“Private J. Luman… was wounded at the battle of Mine Run, Virginia, on November 27th, 1863, when a minie ball passed through his skull. He was treated in the field hospital for several days before being evacuated to the 3rd division hospital in Alexandria. By December 8th, Private Luman was comatose and Surgeon E. Bentley applied a trephine and removed the splinters of bone associated with the wound. His condition failed to improve and he died five days later.”

I was quite delighted to meet up with General Daniel Sickles’ tibia and fibula, which were donated to the museum by Sickles himself after his leg was struck by a cannonball at the Battle Of Gettysburg and had to be amputated. For years afterwards he would journey to the museum on the anniversary of the amputation to visit his leg. What a guy, huh? Also of note: Sickles was the first defendant to successful argue “innocent by temporary insanity” after he murdered his wife’s lover (Philip Barton Key, son of the composer of the national anthem) in 1859. Yep, a true purveyor of morbidity…

This is a femur (upper leg bone) that has been severely disfigured by … erm … some disease or another. Osteoporosis? Syphilis? Elephantiasis? Anyone know??? Well, it’s a creepy looking bone, anyway!

A cornucopia of Civil War injuries – from upper left: “Private C. C. W. … was wounded at Spottsylvania, Virginia, on May 12th, 1864, when a minie ball struck the left side of his head with enough force to split the bullet. Surgery was deferred until May 31st when the minie ball and fragments of the left parietal were removed. By next day, symptoms of infection and pressure on the brain were noted. Private C. C. W. died on June 4th, 1864”; “Private G. Smith… was injured in the skull during an explosion aboard the gunboat George Washington on the Coosaw River in South Carolina on April 9th, 1863. He died on April 12th in Beaufort, South Carolina”; “At the battle of Gettysburg, Private W. F. Faucett, flag bearer… was shot in the left arm and dropped the flag. Faucett picked up the flag with his right hand and continued into battle. After being captured by Union troops, he received hospital care for his injury. The wound became infected and his arm was amputated on September 22nd, 1863.”

Like the Mütter Museum, the National Museum of Health and Medicine has quite a few creepy wax figures that were used as educational tools on display. Here are a couple displaying “before and after” reconstruction of facial injuries incurred during wartime. They’d make great Halloween masks, wouldn’t they?

More nasty ouch-inducing wartime debris.
Regarding the skull: “Gunshot wounds to the skull were fatal in more than 80% of cases reported by Union surgeons. This skull, retrieved in 1866 from the Confederate trenches at Wilderness, Virginia, shows a gunshot wound.”
Regarding the arm: “Infection of the bone following a gunshot wound was a near certainty. Private Sullivan Sager… was shot in the lower leg by a minie ball near Richmond, Virginia, on June 29th, 1862. He entered the hospital on August 13th with puss draining from the wound. His leg was amputated on October 6th, 1862, but he succumbed to a blood infection and died three days later.”
Check out that particularly gruesome color photo of a shell wound of the wrist in the upper right hand corner too!

There are also some interesting historic photographs peppering the walls of the museum. Here’s a well-known pair of photos of a man with secondary syphilis before (far left) and after (center) mercury treatment. Obviously, it worked wonders for him, but mercury treatments were usually just as harmful as the syphilis they were meant to cure.

Here are a couple more of those lovely wax teaching models – in this case, they are showing the effects of tertiary syphilis.

Here are a few more creepy wax models (showing the effects of syphilis on the toe and gonorrhea on a penis), along with a syphilitic femur.

Here’s a nifty collection of fetus/infant skeletons. See that individual in the background with the red shirt on? There were tons of those obnoxious red shirts scurrying about. They were from some school or organization or something. Just our luck: they choose our day for their field trip.

Isn’t this cool looking? It’s a fetus impregnated with some solution that highlights the bones. They really oughtta sell these things as paper weights or ornaments! Unfortunately, this place didn’t have a gift shop. Pity…

Here’s a poor unfortunate preserved fetus that died some horrible intra-uterine death… but lives on in the museum!

A preserved fetus still inside a uterus.

Here’s an entire nervous system, carefully dissected from a body and suspended in formaldehyde. Painstaking work, to be certain!

Shades of the Mütter Museum, Part I: A Dwarf’s Skeleton! This one doesn’t come with as tragic of a story as the Mütter Museum’s poor prostitute though:
“This skeleton, of an elderly woman, exhibits some of the common traits of achondroplasia: flaring of the ends of the long bones and an enlarged head and pronounced forehead.”

Shades of the Mütter Museum, Part II: The Giant Colon! Not quite as giant as the Mütter Museum colon, however. But oh so educational: “Congenital megacolon is due to functional loss of the nerves in a segment of the colon. These nerves which normally help pass undigested matter through the intestine are absent, resulting in obstruction and enlargement. This megacolon was removed from a 19 year old man with a history of constipation.” Horrid fate…

Here’s something that would feel right at home at the Mütter Museum as well: a giant hair ball that was removed from the stomach of a twelve year old girl who ate her hair for six years. The hair ball had charmingly formed into the shape of her stomach. Blech…

This skeleton was one of the most fascinating exhibits we saw: “This is the skeleton of a 47-year-old soldier who had served 11 months in the Spanish-American War of 1898. Some years after the war, bone began to form across most of his joints, so that he was unable to move. For 15 years he lived in the U.S. Soldier’s Home in Washington, DC. His front teeth were removed so that he could be fed because he could not open his mouth.” Isn’t it just amazing the thahorrorst the human body is capable of inflicting upon itself? Here’s a comparison of his skeleton vs. a normal one.

Here are a couple of bones that were broken and not set properly, and that recovered as best they could under the somber circumstances!
I found this one to be a most disconcerting and realistic wax model – of a burn victim. Definitely not something to bump into in a dimly lit room!
This was another topic of great fascination for me: this man’s head had been perfectly preserved by some secret embalming technique. (Why is it that all exceptional embalming techniques are secret? Evita Peron… that little girl in the Italian catacomb… the list goes on…)
Whereas this girl’s head was… less well preserved. But an exceptional mummy, she is! “An American pioneer in arsenic embalming, Dr. Thomas Holmes was active throughout the Civil War, embalming bodies of dead soldiers before they were returned home for burial… During the late nineteenth century, Holmes embalmed a young girl from Kentucky. In the 1940s the remarkably preserved upper torso was donated…”
And with one last gasp – at a horribly deformed spine – our trip through the magnificent National Museum Of Health & Medicine is at an end.

And with that, I drove away from Washington, D.C. and back to Baltimore – my East Coast Morbid Tour 2001 finally at its end!

Museum of Colorado Prisons

Museum of Colorado Prisons (Canon City, Colorado)
This museum is housed in the old Women’s Correctional Facility that was constructed in 1935. The museum contains quite a few goodies including the hangman’s noose used for the last execution by hanging in Colorado, the gas chamber, and some items related to cannibal Alferd Packer. Fun, fun, fun! (Thanks to The Quiet One for the suggestion.)

 

Folsom State Prison Museum

Folsom State Prison Museum (Represa, California)
California’s second-oldest prison has a small museum which is allegedly quite interesting. “From handcuffs and license plates, to belly belts and newspaper clippings, all kinds of intriguing artifacts are on display — including a pair of guns made by two prisoners in the 1930’s.” – Central Valley Chronicles

Pinal County Historical Society Museum

Pinal County Historical Society Museum (Florence, Arizona)
Although I’ve never been to Arizona myself, Maggie S. makes this sound like a most interesting place to visit: “The Historical Society Museum has the actual nooses used to execute inmates, including the only female, who was decapitated when she was hung. They also have the door of the gas chamber that was once used.” If anyone’s been there and can provide more information, please add a comment.

Chris Reid sent the following information:

This is a great museum in  a very historic town founded in 1866. Florence was a silver mining boom town in the 1870’s and the county seat since 1875. It was a wild and woolly place with a shoot out between the sheriff and the deputy in 1888. The museum has the window with the bullet holes from the Tunnel Saloon where the fight started. Other things you might be interested in is the famous trunk murderess’s doll she made while in the prison in Florence. Winnie Ruth Judd-the one who shot her Phoenix roommates and put them in trunks. One fit. One didn’t, so she cut the corpse into pieces to make it fit. Go to the museum to get the full story. Yes, there is also the noose display as well which includes the one of the lady who lost her head and the double execution chair from the first gas execution in Arizona.

Although the prison displays are the most unique, there are other items of interest like the furniture made out of saguaro cactus, the wooden bullets, the Apache playing cards made out of deerskin, info on Camp Florence, the WWII prisoner of war camp, info on Tom Mix, the movie star killed south of Florence in  a freak accident. His suitcases killed him. Amongst the stories of some of the people who lived in Florence is the tale of a young Florence sailor who was on the USS Indianapolis and was one of the few who survived the sinking and the sharks during WWII. There are also Hohokam exhibits, info on movies filmed in Florence (Murphy’s Romans, Stir Crazy to name two) and lots of rodeo info relating to Gene Autry who visited Florence often.

If you haven’t been to this museum, it deserves a trip. While in town check out the over 100 buildings on the National Register and the prison outlet store with prisoner made goods. It’s a great Arizona destination if you like Arizona history and getting off the beaten path

Thank you for the information, Chris!  Sounds like a great place!