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Sandy Spring Museum

501(c)(3) nonprofit history museum in Maryland, U.S. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sandy Spring Museum
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Sandy Spring Museum was founded as a local history museum, preserving the history of the surrounding area of Sandy Spring, MD. Today, by supporting community-driven cultural arts and educational programs, they gather community to build a sense of place and belonging.[5]

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A plaque commemorating the gift of land from Helen Bentley to the Sandy Spring Museum (April 2025)

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History

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An insurance salesman and auctioneer named Delmas Wood started the Sandy Spring Museum in 1981 because he thought Sandy Spring's history was gradually being lost as older residents died.[1][2] Wood wanted a place to preserve antique furniture, farm equipment, photographs, paintings, and documents of the Sandy Spring area.[6] Florence Virginia Barrett Lehman also helped found the museum.[7]

The museum was originally located in the basement of a Sandy Spring National Bank branch in Olney.[8] In October 1986,[9] it moved to Tall Timbers, a brick four-story Colonial house that had been the home of Gladys Brooke Tumbleson, who had died earlier that year.[2] Tumbleson descended from the Brooke family, for which nearby Brookeville was named.[2] Tumbleson sold the building to the museum for less than market value.[2]

Mary Jane Forman Rice founded the Sandy Spring Museum Garden Club, a group of volunteers who tend to the museum's courtyard garden, in 1992.[10]

Helen Bentley, the widow of baseball star Jack Bentley, donated 7.5 acres (30,000 m2) of land on Bentley Road in Sandy Spring to the museum in 1994.[6] The Bentleys' ancestors had lived in Sandy Spring since the late 18th century.[11] Almost the entire cost of the new location was contributed by local donors.[12] The building was designed by local architects Miche Booz and Thomas Bucci.[12][13] They based the design local 18th century barns and houses in order to make sure it would blend in with the area.[12] The arched walkway was originally planned from the road to the entrance, but it was shortened to save costs.[12] The architects gave a distinctive feel to each room of the building, and Booz called the central courtyard the "best room in the museum".[12]

The museum's new building on Bentley Road opened in 1997, providing more room for the museum's exhibits.[8]

Maryland Historical Trust awarded the Educational Excellence Award to Sandy Spring Museum for its interactive exhibit and web site in 2001.[14]

In 2007, a 3,500-square-foot (330 m2) addition opened, providing a research library and a collection storage facility for the museum.[11][15]

In July 2022, the Montgomery County Commission on Women created and buried a time capsule at the Sandy Spring Museum to be opened in July 2072. The capsule contained photos, maps, and written works.[16]

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Exhibits

Sandy Spring Museum's exhibits include a replica of a 19th-century classroom, a replica of a blacksmith's shop, a replica of a general store, and a tractor made from a Model T Ford.[8][6] The museum has archived more than 15,000 artifacts and photographs from the area around Sandy Spring.[6] Some of its collection dates back to 1650.[6]

There are temporary exhibitions that rotate quarterly, which often focus on art and history or art and current events.[17] The artists featured are frequently but not exclusively local.

A windowed gallery displays art by the faculty of Montgomery College.[6]

Two new exhibits were designed by locals in 2014.[18] One of the exhibits is about veterans transitioning from life in a combat zone to life as a civilian.[18] Another exhibit recreated an existing exhibit about community gathering spaces.[18]

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References

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