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The Shelburne Museum in Vermont's Champlain Valley just south of Burlington is "a collection of collections," in the words of founder Electra Havemeyer Webb (1888-1960). Big stuff (including barns) houses little stuff: Hunting lodges, paddlewheel boats, 18th-and-19th century houses comprise a landscape of 37 buildings enclosing 80,000 objects.
Shelburne's selectmen were so impressed by Webb's industry, they soon donated the old town barn, built as a distillery around 1800. Webb took a good look at its derelict condition - and also hand-hewn timbers and rough planks - mulled for a while, and then decided to use it to showcase her textile collection. She moved and remodeled it, then covered the walls with maple, birch, and beech veneers in decorative patterns to set off glorious quilts and rugs. The showpiece of Shelburne is the Round Barn, built in Vermont at the turn of the century and moved to the museum grounds in 1985 and 1986. Most dramatically, the upper part of the silo was moved by helicopter. Today, Round Barn is Shelburne's orientation center and houses collections of agricultural tools, machines, and vehicles. Other barn buildings include the Diamond Barn, noted for its patterned appearance, and today featuring a museum bookstore; the 1840s Shaker Shed, used for elegant displays of baskets, wrought iron and tin whimsies; and a 200-year-old brick Blacksmith Shop.
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