10 January 2015

Baha'i Museum - Charleston


Baha'i Museum, 2 Desportes Court, Charleston, S.C.
Charleston promotes the Museum Mile leading from the Charleston Museum down Meeting St. to the Gibbes Art Museum but there is an alternate museum route. The alternate route would include the Macaulay Museum of Dental History and the Baha'i Museum, don'cha think? We need to add a few more quirky little museums like the Veveteria - Black Velvet Painting Museum in Portland, OR or the Penis Museum in Iceland and I can start leading tours.

Disclaimer, I've never been inside. Every time I've been by it's been locked up tight with no sign of activity.

The museum is named for the late Louis G. Gregory, one of the best-known figures in the faith's 158-year history. Gregory was born and reared in Charleston, the son of two former slaves. He joined the Baha'i faith in 1909 and became one of the faith's best-known worldwide advocates. The Louis G. Gregory Institute in Hemingway, the first full-time Baha'i institute in the United States, was named after him, too.
The museum is in a small, two-story house in a historic neighborhood of homes built by freed slaves. It is the same home where Gregory lived for much of his youth. Charleston Baha'is bought the house at auction in 1989. The museum features displays of Gregory's personal effects, photos and correspondence, as well as exhibits about the Baha'i faith and its history worldwide. The museum sign is being designed by noted Charleston blacksmith Phillip Simmons. The Baha'i faith is one of the youngest of the world's religions, practiced by more than 5 million people in 235 countries. It was founded by Baha'ullah, a Persian nobleman who died in 1892. The central theme of Baha'i teaching is that humanity is one single race and that the day has come for its unification in one global society.
Baha'i Museum, Charleston, S.C.


4 comments:

  1. Interesting looking place, though the belief system, well any belief system, actually, wouldn't appeal to me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am beginning to feel the same way myself, William.

      Delete
  2. Ah yes I can still hear the song. Be Bop Baha'ullah!

    ReplyDelete

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