The Woodman Institute Museum is located at 182 Central Avenue in Dover, New Hampshire, United States. It is a museum dedicated to “To advance and develop passion for history, science, and the arts. To educate, excite, and inspire current and future generations about . . . a changing nation by preserving and exhibiting objects of historic significance, decorative and fine art, and natural science that connect Dover and its citizens to . . . the world.”[2] It was created in 1915 with a bequest of $100,000 from philanthropist Annie Woodman to encourage her city's education in those three fields. The institute opened on July 26, 1916.[3] Under the name of "Woodman Institute", the museum was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.[1]
Visitors can see the sword a Japanese delegate to the 1905 Portsmouth Peace Conference (Treaty of Portsmouth) given to a waiter at the Hotel Wentworth, examples of Dover's textile output, relics from every war in which the United States has fought, an old 13-star American flag, a 10-foot-tall (3.0 m) stuffed polar bear from the Arctic, an old piano with genuine ivory keys, and a collection of taxidermized birds, bugs, fish, mammals, reptiles and amphibians.
On the museum's grounds is the 1675 William Damm Garrison, one of the oldest intact garrison houses in the state, as well as the oldest house in Dover and one of the oldest houses in New Hampshire. It survived the Cochecho Massacre, and was later moved to this location for preservation under a permanent shelter. On the grounds, in the 1st NH Light Artillery Shed, visitors may see an 1863 12-lbs bronze Napoleon cannon used in the American Civil War one of only ten left in existence. In the Tasker’s Funeral Home Shed, guests can view a Victorian funeral exhibit complete with an 1890s horse-drawn hearse. Finally, the Woodman grounds also boast a medicinal garden, rain garden, and the oldest American Sycamore tree in Strafford County.[4]