History of Collections
The Mississippi Museum of Natural Science (MMNS)
began in 1933 as the State Wildlife Museum under the direction of
Ms. Fannye A. Cook, Chief of Research for the Mississippi Game and
Fish Commission (precursor to the Mississippi Department of
Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks) and later Director of the Museum.
From 1936 to1941 an extensive statewide plant and animal survey was
conducted as a joint federal and state Works Progress
Administration (WPA) project under the technical supervision of Ms.
Cook. One of the objectives of the survey project was to "make
collections representative of species of vertebrates in
Mississippi, noting their distribution within the state, observing
their habits, and disseminating information secured from field and
laboratory investigations in connection herewith."
To facilitate the collecting effort, 18
satellite museums were established throughout the state at
community colleges and high schools to serve as temporary
repositories for the specimens collected. Having received her
training at the Smithsonian Institution while attending George
Washington University, Ms. Cook trained field collectors in the
methods of collecting and preparing museum specimens and at the
height of the project over 300 persons were involved in the survey.
Though Ms. Cook's primary personal interest was in fishes and
birds, all taxa of plants and animals were included equally in the
survey, including mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fishes, birds
(including nests and egg sets), freshwater mussels, and insects.
During the 6-year project period, over 152,000 specimens were
collected and over 135,000 specimens were preserved and cataloged
into the permanent museum collections. The collections housed in
Jackson became the foundation upon which the present MMNS
biological collections were established.
As
a testament to her professionalism and constant concern for the
proper preparation and subsequent preservation of the specimens
obtained during the survey, Ms. Cook often chided field collectors
for submitting less than acceptable museum specimens and
continually implored her superiors of the need to provide better
storage conditions for the invaluable growing collections. In a
1939 memo to field collectors Ms. Cook reminded them that, "The
work to which each of you send to this office will stand to your
credit or discredit for generations to come, as the material which
we are assembling will be permanently preserved as state records."
In 1971, the Mississippi Legislature designated the Museum of
Natural Science as Mississippi's "official State Natural Science
Museum" and in honor of Ms. Cook's remarkable dedication and
achievements, designated the Museum as the "Fannye A. Cook
Memorial."
The mission of the Museum, in part, is to promote
Mississippi's biological diversity by developing and maintaining
biological collections which are used to document the distribution
of Mississippi's flora and fauna; serving as a repository for
voucher specimens collected during scientific studies and faunal
surveys conducted in the state; and by developing and maintaining
an active research program involving the distribution, status and
biology of Mississippi's flora and fauna.
Currently, the collections consist of more than
880,000 specimens, representing the largest single reference for
Mississippi vertebrate animals and freshwater mussels in existence.
These specimens have been collected by agency personnel, non-agency
researchers, and the general public in an ongoing effort to
document the diversity, geographic distribution, and ecology of
both extant and extinct organisms, as well as the conservation
status of living plants and animals in Mississippi. Today, these
specimens and specimen related data are used to provide biological
information to resource managers, conservation biologists,
researchers, educators, and the general public.