As my tenure as director of the Whanganui Regional Museum comes to an end, it is probably inevitable that I start looking back.
I came to Whanganui nearly four years ago to help with the task of rebuilding and updating a 120-year-old museum with some rather shaky buildings and an extraordinary legacy.
The museum began in a quintessentially Victorian manner. Bewhiskered Samuel Drew - businessman, taxidermist, amateur scientist and prominent citizen of the would-be metropolis of Whanganui - sold his burgeoning collection of artefacts, specimens and stuffed animals to the town at a gentleman's discount.
Amid great excitement in 1895, an elegant little building was opened to house it, one of the first purpose-built museums in the colony. Together with the opera house, and later the Sarjeant Gallery, Ward Observatory and Alexander Library, the museum helped establish Whanganui as a centre for scholarship and culture.
As years passed and the city grew, so did the museum. The first building was doubled in size and then left behind when a grand new one was erected in Watt St in 1928. Thirty more years and that too was straining at the seams.