The Beginnings of a Museum
The Lyman Allyn Art Museum was founded in 1926 at the bequest of Harriet Upson Allyn (1840 -1926).
Harriet Upson Allyn (1840 -1926) was a life-long New London resident and the youngest of Captain Lyman Allyn’s (1797- 1874) six children. She named the museum in memory of her father, a man who commanded a whaling boat by the age of twenty-one and who later became a director of a banking company, an insurance company and a railroad company. Furthermore, Lyman Allyn founded a school for boys in New London in 1817.
In 1910 Harriet Allyn had requested, in her will, that the Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Company of Hartford use money from her estate to create a park and a museum. In addition, Allyn donated a significant tract of land to neighboring Connecticut College, then a women’s school.
Allyn’s death in 1926 established the beginning of the Museum. Initially there was no collection and no building. Architect Charles A. Platt was hired “to design an elegant neoclassical granite structure on a hill overlooking New London and the Thames River” using a design similar to the one Platt created for the Addison Gallery of American Art at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. The Museum opened in 1932, displaying a modest collection built by the first Director, Winslow Ames.
Today, the permanent collection consists of over 19,000 paintings, drawings, prints, sculptures, furniture and decorative arts, with an emphasis on American paintings and decorative arts from the 18th through 20th centuries.