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In 1924, Mrs. Mary Stewart Carey visited the Brooklyn Children's
Museum and was inspired to create a museum for children in Indianapolis. In
1925 she began paying rent to the Propylaeum to use the space in its
carriage house. One of the early items that were donated included a mounted
porcupine fish. The Museum moved to Garfield Park in 1926. The first
month's attendance was about 1550. A year later, the museum moved to the Carey
Home, where it would stay for the next 19 years. The 1891 auto built
by Charles Black was loaned to the Children's Museum in 1927. Other exhibits
included a marine room, a pioneer room, an archaeology room, and a natural
history room with a library and reading room.
© The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, 2000