Museum of History in Granite

The Museum of History in Granite is a museum in the town of Felicity, California. The museum exhibits monuments made from Missouri Red Granite. Each is 100 feet (30 m) long. Conceived as a historic record of humanity designed to last for four millennia, the Museum of History in Granite is a collection of over 900 large granite outdoor panels.[1] The museum was conceived and commissioned by Jacques-AndrĂ© Istel and its lead artist is Gene Britton.[2]

The pyramid houses the official center point / home of the Museum of History in Granite at Center of the World Plaza in Felicity, California.

Development has been underway for several decades with most of monuments completed. However the eight monuments of the "History of Humanity" are only 31% engraved.[2]

Subjects include the History of California, Dedicated in 2016. Smaller monuments include the Felicity Stone, a "Rosetta Stone for the future" located at the center of the History of Humanity monuments.

Exhibits

  1. Felicity Stone (9 panels) - using a concept similar to the Rosetta Stone translation from English to several ancient languages
  2. History of Humanity (416 panels - 25% complete) - Centerpiece exhibit includes Michaelangelo's Creation on panels #11-13.
  3. USMC Korean War Memorial - List of the 4,617 Marines and 107 Navy Corpsmen who gave their lives during the Korean War.
  4. Quest for the Sky - History of aviation (Recipient of the Air and Space Medal in Europe in 2003),
  5. The History of the French Foreign Legion (51 panels)
  6. The History of Arizona
  7. Hall of Fame of Parachuting
  8. The Wall for the Ages - record your name here for the ages
  9. The History of the United States of America (62 panels) - Dedication was on Washington's Birthday 2014.
  10. The History of California

References

  1. Richey, Roland. "Museum of History in Granite". CaliforniaResortLife. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved January 18, 2021.
  2. Mooallem, Jon (19 February 2014). "A Journey to the Center of the World". The New York Times Magazine. Archived from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 18 January 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)


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