THE DICKERT WILDLIFE COLLECTION IS CURRENTLY CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC
At the Saranac Lake Free Library.
As a young man of 19 Charles Lawrence Dickert rode the stagecoach from Westport, Connecticut to Saranac Lake . The village of Saranac Lake was described as “the youngest Adirondack hamlet, little more than a fair sized clearing in the wilderness.” Close to a hundred years later, the work of this taxidermist survives, and defines the history of the Village of Saranac Lake .
Mr. Dickert, or Charlie, came to Saranac Lake in 1886 and apprenticed with H.H. Miner, an able area taxidermist. In 1904 Charlie started his own business at 16 Algonquin Avenue. Entering the showroom of Mr. Dickert’s shop was like walking into a sportsman’s paradise. The green burlap walls were covered with the heads and hides of every species of bird, animal and fish known to the Adirondack forests and streams and exotic beasts and birds from distant lands. In 1932 Charlie estimated that he had already mounted more than 5000 deer heads.
Mr. Dickert also was a member of the village board of trustees and served as its president in 1921. He was a member of the board of education during that time.
Charles Lawrence Dickert died at home in Saranac Lake , age 75, on July 13, 1942.
In 1961 Edmond A. Guggenheim, a longtime friend of Mr. Dickert’s presented 135 specimens of Charles Dickert’s taxidermy to the Whiteface Mountain Museum at Wilmington . The Adirondack Daily Enterprise reported that “Short of going to the Museum of Natural History in New York or visiting one of the famous private Adirondack “camps” it was previously impossible to see the mounted animals prepared by Charles Dickert of Saranac Lake.”
The collection was called “doubtless the finest collection of Adirondack animals ever gathered in one place”
In 1968 the collection moved to its permanent home, in a new wing of the Saranac Lake Free Library, donated by Mr. Guggenheim. By this time, the collection had grown to 250 specimens, about two-thirds donated by Mr. Guggenheim and the rest donated by Dickert’s daughters, Mrs. Willard Green and Mrs. William Koernig.
2003 marked a new page in the history of the collection. The Green family and the Saranac Lake Free Library agreed to redisplay the collection, and the museum was closed for renovation. On February 11, 2005 the museum was finally reopened to the public, with the collection securely behind glass and in an environmentally controlled room. Additionally, the collection is available to visitors at any time the library is open.
The Charles Dickert Wildlife Collection has attracted visitors from both the United States and abroad. It is a link to the history of the village of Saranac Lake , and to the Adirondack Park .
Admission to the museum is free. We hope you enjoy the collection.