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Reviews, get directions and information for Eli Whitney Museum

Eli Whitney Museum

Description

The Eli Whitney Museum, in Hamden, Connecticut, is an experimental learning workshop for students, teachers, and families. The museum's main building was originally the Eli Whitney Armory, a gun factory erected by Eli Whitney in 1798. The museum focuses on teaching experiments that are the roots of design and invention, featuring hands-on building projects and exhibits on Whitney and A. C. Gilbert.Site historyThe museum building was originally the Eli Whitney Armory, erected by Whitney to produce muskets on a site he purchased on September 17, 1798. The factory was powered by water from the Mill River and produced muskets for the United States government. On June 14, 1798, he contracted to produce 10,000 muskets to be delivered within 28 months at the cost of $134,000.00; in fact, it took ten years. When he signed the contract, Whitney had no factory, no workers and no experience in gun manufacturing. However, in a letter to Secretary of the Treasury Oliver Wolcott, a fellow Yale University graduate and friend, Whitney had written:I am persuaded that Machinery moved by water adapted to this Business would greatly diminish the labor and facilitate the manufacture of this Article. Machines for forging, rolling, floating, boring, grinding, polishing, etc. may all be made use of to advantage.... (May 13, 1798) Whitney's factory was at the very forefront of the American Industrial Revolution, using water-powered machinery, and it was among the first to have standardized, interchangeable parts (for some but not all of its parts).



"We are an experimental learning workshop for students, teachers and families. We collect, interpret and teach experiences that are the root of design and invention."
Address: 915 Whitney Ave, Hamden 06517
Phone: (203) 777-1833
Parking: Lot
State: CT
City: Hamden
Street Number: 915 Whitney Ave
Zip Code: 06517
categories: history museum



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Reviews
It was my first time at the museum. I was very excited for my son to make a boat to float in the water lab. We arrived a little after 10 and the water lab was off. We went inside and made a boat. The person working the museum said he would ask to have it tuned on. So we finished our boat and paid 8$ for it. Took it out and the lab was still not on… so I went back in and asked if I misunderstood him. He said he’d ask again to have it turned on. We went out and waited about 15 more minutes. At that point I was irritated and over it. So we paid 8$ for a little boat for no reason. I don’t think I’ll be back. They clearly don’t care about the kids having fun. My son was sad and cried as we left. There aren’t many places where kids can play outside like this and I was really looking forward to it. I probably won’t come back though. :
Love this place! Great fun and educational for any age. I've been going since I was a kid and it's just as good now as then. Donation style admission with pay to build mini projects available. Can spend 1/2 to 2 hours comfortably with kids in tow. Highlight is the Gilbert train setup for holidays.
Nice quiet, and peaceful trails. Only 3/4 of a mile but it's a very nice quick hike with historical scenery. And a great little museum for children!
I'm rating the grounds, not the museum itself as I've never actually been inside, nor have I seen it open. This is a beautiful place to go if you're looking for a nice place to walk! Just behind the museum the trail begins inside of an old covered bride that crosses a small river. There is a huge waterfall, a serene lake you can fish in or walk across using a small bridge that connects one side to the other. Despite being directly on Whitney Avenue it's pretty quiet and gives you the feeling of being tucked away in the woods somewhere. The grounds sit at the base of East Rock so you can easily hike up from the museum to the summit. I've never been able to find any trail markings so you've got to sort that out on your own, but it's doable.
Beautiful area for a walk. The Mill River, which flows through the Whitney Armory site is on its way to Long Island Sound, has played a crucial role in its history. Eli Whitney, Sr. came to the site in 1798 specifically in order to use the water's power for running machinery; sixty-two years later his son turned the river into the first public water supply for the city of New Haven. For some decades thereafter, the river continued to provide power not only for the Armory's machinery, but also for pumping its own water into the network of pipes reaching New Haven's buildings and hydrants. Eventually it gave way, as a power source, to steam engines and electric motors, but it continues to this day to supply water for the city. The low dam and waterwheels that Eli Whitney, Sr. installed made possible the Whitney Armory with its adjacent small settlement, Whitneyville. Like many another New England water-privilege site, but unlike the larger planned waterpower complexes such as Lowell or Holyoke in Massachusetts, the community remained of modest size. Constrained in large part by the natural limits on its water power, Whitneyville did not grow into an industrial city, but led him first in the 1840s to replace the waterwheels with hydraulic turbines, the latest advance in waterpower technology, and then to make the dam five times higher in 1860. The other purpose of this move - to form Lake Whitney as the as the first reservoir for the New Haven Water Company - was what paid for the construction of the dam we see at the site today. The creation of Lake Whitney in turn prevented further industrial development at waterpower sites upstream - by flooding them - thus leaving the Armory as southern Hamden's only industrial site until a later era.
My son went on a field trip here where I was a chaperone. We didn't tour it but had fun learning about the life cycle of a butterfly and making a cool craft.
Went here for a separate fundraising event, but was really impressed with the interactive options they offered for families.
A beautiful campus and lots of interesting engineering programs for young people.
Visiting the museum was a fun, free outing for my three year old on a rainy day. The museum is small and maintains the authentic charm of an historical building. I'm looking forward to visiting again for my daughter to take part in their variety of experiments and activities.
Great trails around the museum. The train set was terrific.
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