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What we do with things is more important than things.
Limulus polyphemus. The Horseshoe Crab is considered a living fossil.

Contents

History of the Catalog

Categories including Series and Subseries and Vinculum Categories

Categories are often both overlapping (vinculum) and mutable. At the Main Street Museum they include, but are not limited to: Flora; Fauna; Exotica (geographically significant objects); Shoes and Feet (and Tiny Shoes and Feet); Fiber, Textiles and Costumes; Tangled Things; Objects Associated with Famous People; Round Things; Objects with Orifices; Bad Art; Bad Craft; Recreated Artifacts Refused by Dartmouth Realia; Amulets and Sacred Objects; Judæica; Vermontiana; Relics from the Civil War/War Between the States; and Unidentified Mammals or “Flocked Pets.”

The Main Street Museum Catawiki

Vinculum Categories

Carbon

Color as a Hysterical Reaction

Flocking; an Industrial Process

The Human Head

Oxidization

Round Things

Tangled Things

  • Categories Teeth and More Teeth and especially Color as a Hysterical Reaction, Round Things and Tangled Things created by curation teams of the Robert Hull Fleming Museum, University of Vermont.

Objects as Evidence of Human Culture; Artificialia

Geographically Significant Artifacts; "Things from around the World," Archeology

Tumbler which may—or may not—have come to America on the Mayflower.

Historically Significant Artifacts

Brick.jpg

Costumes and Clothing

Shoes and more shoes.

Tramps and Hobos

The Working World

Vinyl pet toy in the shape of a Frisbie pie tin.

Artifacts as Evidence of Religion; Relics and Comparitive Religious Studies

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The intricately woven stands of sweetgrass in this antique basket still smell sweet. Tiny. Abnaki. Delicate. All categories for this artifact.

The American Indian

  • Arrowheads (Suction Cups)
  • Figurines
  • Fragments of Things
  • Technology
  • Weapons, or Weapon-Like Objects

Pet Toys

Two Dimensional Evidence Paper; Archive Collections

Lithographic Prints and Signage

Manuscripts and Letters and Journals

A tin-type in the Museum collection. 20th century. Probably created at a county fair.

Photographs

Postcards

Sheet Music

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The History of Armaments and Military Technology

Actual Miltary Technology

Substitutes or Stand-ins for Weaponry and Munitions

(For World War II items see The Leroy Short Sporting and Wild Game Memorial)

The United States Civil War

The Rensselaer William Foote Memorial

Sound (Audible) Artifacts

see also Sheet Music and The Great American Songbook

Art

Two Dimensional Pieces

Three Dimensional Art, Sculpture

Modern Art Created By Accident (MACBA)

Elvis Aaron Presley Visual Art Amalgam

Dogs and cats made of wax.

Bad Craft

Cat, or Unidentified Mammal? You decide.

Fauna; Animalia; Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects

Humans

The Ossuary; Bones

I Squeak!

The Hall of North American Mammals

The Leroy Short Sporting and Wild Game Memorial

Teeth and More Teeth

Heads (Capitis; Verticis)

This will eventually become the label, and attendant subsidiary labels, delineating the marvels of the Main Street Museum's famed collection of HEADS (We use the Latin terms to distinguish between CAPITIS, the plural of Caput, or head, and VERTICIS, the plural of Vertex, or top, crown, peak, high point).

Research on this point of terminology was generously provided by Daniel Baker.

Specimens of (or Objects relating to) Birds of the Americas

Reptiles Amphibians and Serpents

Fish: Aquatic Living, with or without Bones

  • Fresh Water Specimens
  • Salt Water Speimens
  • Other
  • Seashells
El Tiburón.

Entomology; Insects

Animalia according to John Wilkins, according to Jorge Luis Borges

A drawer of bugs.

Flora; Vegetalia

Trees; The Animistic Perspective

Guatemalan Vegetation, unknown type, from the Farrow Collection.

Exotic, Tropic and Sub-tropic Vegetable Samples

Corn; Taxanomic Theories relevant to Zea mays

Small flowers that are, probably, some type of violet. 19th century, c.e.

Flowers and Fruits

Camellias, Edelweiss, Roses, Violets Unidentified Flowers and Oranges

Vines

Ferns

Mosses and Lichens

Poison Ivy. Banks of the Potomac River.

Native and Non-Native Botany of Windsor County; Invasive and Non-Invasive Species of White River Junction, Vermont

Nuts, Pods and Seeds

Minerals; Inanimate, or Apparently Inanimate Objects

Other

References and Archive