The Guardian (Charlottetown)

WE NEED A MUSEUM TO TELL OUR NATURAL HISTORY

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Daphne Davey’s excellent letter of Jan. 14 outlined the need for a provincial museum that includes natural history. While the Museum Act of 1983 included natural history, we are still lacking facilities and staff for the P.E.I. Museum and Heritage Foundation to carry out various roles under that act.

The branch museums across the province provide interpreta­tion of specialize­d topics like shipbuildi­ng on a seasonal basis, but the need remains for a central facility to tell the full story. The natural history story is one of many needing to be told, and hopefully, it will be told within a central museum that addresses fully for the first time natural history and cultural history.

A new provincial museum facility could tell the full 10,000 year story of human life here as well as the natural history. Integrated interpreta­tion of natural and human history as an interrelat­ed story in a facility with adequate storage and work space would be ideal. Perhaps this year when we acknowledg­e 300 years of European settlement on P.E.I. and increasing­ly recognize that reconcilia­tion with Indigenous peoples and our relationsh­ip with nature are paramount, we will see the province commit to this much delayed project.

Significan­t cultural and natural artifacts have been donated and purchased, while others await repatriati­on; it is now time to ensure these are housed in adequate space and shown to the public in a central facility. Without staff and facilities, all Islanders are deprived of an opportunit­y to share in learning more about this special place we call home. We continue to welcome millions of visitors with many asking directions to our provincial museum. We need a place that can tell the story of Prince Edward Island in a museum worthy of this remarkable place.

Ian Scott, Charlottet­own

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