International Cryptozoology Museum

Location
Portland, ME

Organization Details

About

Loren Coleman on the History of the International Cryptozoology Museum.

In August 2003, I brought a lifelong dream to life. I wished to share the many items I had collected during the last half of the 20th century with researchers, scholars, colleagues, and the general public.

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I had traveled far and wide ~ through passion and patience ~ to interview eyewitnesses, chronicle the reports, and gather material evidence and cultural artifacts related to cryptozoology. Here I am in Willow Creek, California, 1975.

Finally in 2003, I founded and opened the International Cryptozoology Museum in the entire first floor of a house I bought specifically to hold the collection and my family elsewhere, in Portland, Maine. The site was soon visited by a long line of filmmakers, reporters, and a beginning trickle of interested individuals, usually cryptozoologists and authors.

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The first item collected for the future museum, from 1960, used on the World Books Snowman Expedition to the Himalaya, lead by Edmund Hillary and Marlin Perkins.

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The museum modestly began with sculptures and paintings created just for it, hundreds of cryptozoology toys and souvenirs from around the world, and one-of-a-kind artifacts.

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Loren Coleman talks about the International Cryptozoology Museum located in his Portland home. To the far right is a bronze cast of the Patterson film Bigfoot, and on the wall is the coelacanth, a fish that was presumed extinct until it was caught off the coast of South Africa last century.

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These included a life-size, 8 feet tall Bigfoot representation, a full-scale, six-foot-long thousand dollar coelacanth model, 100 Bigfoot, Yeti, Yowie, and other footcasts, fakes like jackalopes, Feejee Mermaid & furred trout.

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Additionally displayed were Hollywood cryptid-related props asThe Mothman PropheciesPoint Pleasant police outfit, the movieP. T. Barnumsauthentic 3.5 feet tall Feejee Mermaid, the TV seriesFreakylinks22 foot wide Thunderbird, and some ofMagnoliasfalling frogs. Special art and sculpture creations by some of the leading cryptozoological artists in the world were featured.

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Mokele-mbembe hunter Scott Norman (right) visits the ICM in its first location, during the October before Scotts sudden and tragic death.

In March 2006, the Museums future Assistant Director Jeff Meuse visited, and he became a cornerstone to the future success of the ICM. Other friendships and associations began during the early days of the Museum, including Michelle Soulieres trip to the museum.

The space in my home was being overgrown by the museum. It was time to move.

MovePhoto by Shawn Patrick Ouellette: Loren Coleman of the International Cryptozoology Museum packs up artifacts at his home that are to be moved to 661 Congress St. In the background are volunteers Jeff and Jessica Meuse of South Portland who are helping Coleman with his move.

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Finally, in 2009, after noting to associates in Portland that I wanted to move the Museum to a more central location, I was offered space in the back of Michelle Soulieres future new bookstore, The Green Hand. Due to tireless efforts of Jeff Meuse and other volunteers, and contributions from scores of people across the world, we made the move. The final fiscal support came from a generous donation from an individual representing the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club.

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The International Cryptozoology Museum, officially registered with the town clerk, had a Grand Opening in the Outer Art District, and opened with the help of Michelle, Jeff, Caleb, and a long list of others, on November 1, 2009. Over 80 visitors came that first day, as far away as from Boston and Baltimore. A ribbon cutting Opening was attended a few days later by over 200 people.

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Although we had a three-year lease with Michelle, it soon became clear that the one room, 500 square feet, was too small. Due to the fact Michelles husband wanted to utilize the location, we were able to move to a larger venue, six times as large, right around the corner, at 11 Avon Street, Portland, Maine.

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We opened again on October 31, 2011, and had in the meantime, became a nonprofit corporation in the State of Maine.

20120530_PollGordon Chibroski / Staff Photographer. Wednesday, May 30, 2012. Big Foot stands quietly as Hannah Taube and Robert Baird, visitors from Boston, enjoy the Cryptozoology Museum at 11 Avon Street in Portland. The Cryptozoology Museum won the award for Family Fun in the Readers Choice Awards. They have nothing like this in Boston, remarked Baird.

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Our Grand (Re)Opening in 2011 hosted almost 400 visitors.

The future holds more surprises. Stay tuned.

Mission Statement

Mission Statement of the International Cryptozoology Museum Cryptozoology is the study of hidden or unknown animals. These are usually larger zoological species that, to date, remain unverified by science, such as Yetis, Bigfoot, Lake Monsters, and Sea Serpents, as well as hundreds of other yet-to-be-found animals (cryptids) worldwide, but which compelling ethnoknown evidence has been collected for their possible existence. It also encompasses the study of animals of recent discovery, such as the coelacanth, okapi, megamouth shark, giant panda, and mountain gorilla.The International Cryptozoology Museum has as its primary mission to educate, inform, and share cryptozoological evidence, artifacts, replicas, and popular cultural items with the general public, media, students, scholars, and cryptozoologists from around the world.This museum is the result of more than five decades of field research, travel, and dedication to gathering representative materials, native art, footcasts, hair samples, models, and other cryptozoological samples. Its director, Loren Coleman has moved his cabinet-of-curiosities home museum collection to a more formal foundation establishment in a planned, secure fashion. He and a dedicated battery of volunteers opened the museum, first in 2003, and then moved to the downtown public location on November 1, 2009, as the worlds first cryptozoology museum. On September 15, 2011, the next step was the nonprofit incorporation of the Museum in the State of Maine, and then moving into a larger venue for our broad mission purposes.Realizing that cryptozoology is a gateway science for many young peoples future interest in biology, zoology, wildlife studies, paleoanthropology, paleontology, anthropology, ecology, marine sciences, and conservation, the Museum is filling a needed educational, scientific, and natural history niche in learning.

Volunteer Opportunities