Children's Museum and Theatre of Maine
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Children's Museum and Theatre of Maine Exterior
Children Explore a Lobster Trap in the Lobster Boat Exhibit that explores Maine's waterfront history.
Climbing the Rock Wall
Romeo and Juliet Production at the Theatre
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
History of the Children's Museum of Maine
The Children’s Museum of Maine was founded in 1976 by the Junior League of Portland, and at that time, the Museum and the Theatre were two separate entities (they didn’t join forces until 2008).
When the museum opened, it inhabited only a few rooms in Cape Elizabeth’s Fort Williams Park, but its popularity skyrocketed and by 1980, the museum moved to a 4,000-square-foot Victorian Mansion on the campus grounds of Portland’s Westbrook College. Successful exhibits and outreach programs brought more interest to the Museum, and in 1988, the "Dinamation: Land of the Giants" exhibit attracted more than 50,000 visitors and gave the museum its national acclaim. A Moonwalk exhibit the following year celebrated the 20th anniversary of the moon landing and attracted 8,000 visitors for the event.
With a capital campaign spearheaded by Frederic L. Thompson, the museum was able to raise enough funds and purchase the Chamber of Commerce building on Free Street in 1991. Two years later, the museum opened to the public, and in its first year of operation, the Children’s Museum of Maine attracted more than 120,000 visitors.1
History of the Children's Theatre
Dating back to 1923, the Children’s Theatre of Portland stands as the oldest continuously operating children’s theatre in the entire United States. It was founded by the Junior League of Portland, and it held its first official production in 1933. The first production, “The Tinderbox,” gave the theatre well-deserved praise and it helped create two traditions by 1936: children are cast as performers and the theatre runs a three-play season according to the school year.
Throughout the next several decades, the theatre saw the rise of its mobile show (1944), the Saturday morning 15-minute broadcasts on WSCH (1947), and Koko the Clown (1954), an early staple of the theatre who would prepare audiences for the program and entertain between acts.
By 2008, the theatre merged with the Children’s Museum of Maine and has been putting on well-attended and acclaimed productions since.2
Exhibits at the Museum
Children between 8 and 17 can audition for a role in upcoming productions, and when visiting the museum, always make sure to check out the theatre season.
In addition to the theatre, many interactive exhibits at the museum offer children exciting and broad hands-on experiences. The Top Floor of the museum houses the Camera Obscura exhibit, which allows children to play with light, shadows, and photography.
On the First Floor, children can explore the massive indoor playground before checking out a series of ball exhibits that explore the physics of motion. The Our Town exhibit on the First Floor is a fully-functional town in kid scale, and it features an explorable Toddler Park, Child Inventor Service, Market, Bank, and much more.
Heading up to the Second Floor, children can enjoy the multifaceted Discover Woods, where kids can try out a rock wall, explore basic survival skills in a mock wilderness, become a ranger and identify plants, and even explore the only kid-powered space shuttle in all of Portland.
Lastly, the Lower Level of the Museum features the 1950s-era Coco’s Diner, a Dress-Up Theatre, and the three-dimensional Snack Smart Display that helps promote healthy eating habits.3