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ExhibitsThe new exhibit in the 1829 Post Hospital--Military Medicine at Mackinac--takes you far beyond the familiar story of Dr. William Beaumont to focus on the state of early 19th-century medicine on Mackinac Island and the methods of diagnosis and treatment practiced during that time. In addition to a children’s area with a giant, hands-on stethoscope and microscope, you can see a “virtual” physician from the 1830s named Erastus Wolcott making his rounds and commenting on actual cases he managed at the fort. The projected image of a modern doctor then offers her contemporary diagnoses and courses of treatment for comparison. The careers of five of the fort’s physicians—including Beaumont, Wolcott, and William Hammond, who later became a U.S. Surgeon General—are discussed at length on the exhibit’s panels. Displays of antique medical instruments and period settings that include a realistic vaccination scene round out this exciting interpretive experience. Kids' QuartersKids' Quarters is an interactive exhibit designed especially for our youngest visitors, and is located inside the Officers' Stone Quarters. More than 15 interactive areas are contained in this exhibit, including:
Mackinac: An Island Famous in These RegionsSponsored by the Ford Motor Company Fund, this is our largest museum exhibit with 3,500 square feet on the second floor of the Soldiers' Barracks. Explore the history of Mackinac Island and the many people who inhabited it over the centuries, including Native Americans, missionaries, fur traders, fishermen, soldiers, and tourists. Rare artifacts and historical photographs help tell the tale. Highlights include a touch-screen video featuring 20th-century Mackinac home movie footage, clips from the 1940s movie "This Time For Keeps," behind-the-scenes photos from "Somewhere in Time," fur trade-era touchables, and 1860s stereoview postcards. You can even step onto a reproduction Mackinac Victorian cottage porch and enjoy a unique view of the island's scenic East and West Bluffs.Officers' Hill QuartersThis restored duplex home contains period settings and professionally prepared exhibits that reflect the family and social lives of officers, wives, and children who lived at Fort Mackinac during the 1880s. Click here to see Exhibits at other sites in Mackinac State Historic Parks. |