Same thing with the Prime Meridian monument in Greenwich, London. I’ve never been there, much less with a GPS, but I correctly suspected that it wasn’t exact when I zoomed in on it in Google Maps and the longitude part of the URL was not quite exactly zero. According to Wikipedia at least, it’s around 100m off.
Maybe it was another “museum” and not the Witch History Museum? It was so long ago that I can’t be sure of the exact name. I do remember that it was on the main drag and that it was very cheesy with lots of screaming sound effects.
@Marvin_the_Martian now I don’t feel so bad about missing the Book of Kells when we were in Dublin 3 years ago. We were trying to buy tickets online but the credit card confirmation wouldn’t go through and my daughter was very upset.
Oh, there were certainly missionaries working the welcome area in 2004 and 2005 when we were there. Even in Mandarin! My in-laws were there in 2004 and we were in 2005.
I think it’s worth a visit if you have the time. The thing I liked about the museum is you take an elevator down to see and walk through the main displays. Being underground in the tunnel mock-up gives you a feeling of actually being in a mine.
An added plus is the museum is right next to a drive-through Rt 66 arch, so you can take an auto-selfie if you’re so inclined.
I saw that doco! It’s mostly how the nearby town tried to rally around the Ark Museum, by building motels, opening restaurants, etc. and they got NO business from them, even though they bought ads in a program, with coupons! Some churches even offered to host groups for free, with a deposit (as a Girl Scout, our troop did that a few times) but again, no takers.
Minor nitpick, the temple is a couple of blocks away. The PCC was originally intended to be a place where college students from all over the pacific could make a little money while attending BYU Hawaii. Didn’t strike me as pushing a Mormon connection, but I knew the history going in so probably didn’t notice.
I think I’d actually be more surprised to find any public monument or major border line that GPS confirms to actually be in the place the pre-1900 surveyors thought it was.
Those folks did an incredible job under difficult circumstances, but their tools weren’t quite up to modern snuff.
If you’re still obsessed after watching the doc, you might be interested in the series that Ross Blocher did for the Oh No Ross And Carrie! podcast. (Episode 1 here)
Yes, but the Prime Meridian was supposed to be defined by that line at the Greenwich Observatory. It wasn’t measured from somewhere else; it went right through the middle of a certain telescope.
What made it off was that a plumb line at the Observatory apparently went slightly off of going through the center of the Earth. (I don’t know what caused this. A mountain can cause plumb lines to be off, but there’s no mountains in the London area.) Later they redefined the Meridian to be a plane that does go through the center of the Earth, so that’s why the discrepancy.
I don’t know the details either, but at a fine enough resolution, the Earth is way off being an idealized blob of homogenous material where local vertical as defined by local gravity points perfectly the geometric center. Earth is more uniform than some other objects like the Moon, but still isn’t perfect when you really apply your magnifying glass.
Well, to be fair the Witch History Museum IS on a main drag, is arguably cheesy, and has screaming sound effects. But they get their facts mostly right.
It’s been quite a while since I’ve been to any of he Witch Houses or Museums in Salem. I’ve lived near the place for years, and things may have changed and my memory might be failing, too. But I wouldn’t go into Salem any time in October – the Tourists have Already Won.
My wife and I visited The House on the Rock during a trip to Wisconsin this past Summer. I had heard a lot about the place and had wanted to visit it for years. Now, I wouldn’t call it the worst museum ever, if it can even really be called a museum, and I’m glad I was able to see it once in my life, but you could not pay me to go through that place again. Here’s what I said about it in a ‘Summer vacation’ thread I had started:
Now, I had read stuff about THotR and seen pictures, but nothing can prepare one for the sheer, enormous, batcrap insanity of the place. It is beyond bonkers. For those who may not know of it, an eccentric guy built a sprawling, maze-like house on a big hill and populated it with millions of pieces of crazy antiques / junk he obsessively collected over years. It’s like a bad acid trip, or a nightmare stuck inside the mind of a madman.
It just goes on and on and on. You go from “how charmingly eccentric” to “wow, it’s a lot of weirdness to take in” to “HOLY HELL WHEN WILL THE MADNESS STOP???”. As someone who has a strong strain of OCD running in my family, this place ramped up my anxiety big time. I’ve been haunted by memories of the place ever since.
There’s a similar place in DC, called the O St. Museum, but I think calling it a museum is kind of a stretch. More of an overgrown art project. Same with the Winchester House.