| |  | | | Haida Canoe |
1961 The Haida Canoe exhibit is installed in the 77th Street entrance area.
1963 The Hall of North American Small Mammals opens on the first floor.
1964 The Frank M. Chapman Memorial Hall of North American Birds opens on the third floor.
1965 The Hall of Eskimos (subsequently closed) opens on the first floor.
The Hall of Primates opens on the third floor.
 | | Central Park West Facade | |
1966 The Hall of Eastern Woodlands Indians opens on the third floor.
1967 The Hall of Plains Indians opens on the third floor.
The Museums exterior is designated an official New York City Landmark.
1968 Gardner D. Stout becomes President of the Museum.
The Hall of African Peoples opens on the second floor.
1970 The Hall of Mexico and Central America opens on the second floor.
1971 Gallery 77, a special-exhibition space on the first floor, is completed.
The Hall of Pacific Peoples opens on the third floor; reopens as Margaret Mead Hall of Pacific Peoples in 1984.
1973 The Frederick H. Leonhardt People Center opens on the second floor.
1974 The Louis Calder Laboratory and the Alexander M. White Natural Science Center are completed on the second floor.
1975 Robert G. Goelet becomes President of the Museum.
The Theodore Roosevelt Rotunda on the Museums second floor is designated an Interior Landmark.
| |  | | | Margaret Mead |
1976 The Morgan Memorial Hall of Gems and the Harry Frank Guggenheim Hall of Minerals open on the first floor.
1977 Gallery 3, a special-exhibition space on the third floor, is completed.
The Hall of Reptiles and Amphibians opens on the third floor.
1980 The Gardner D. Stout Hall of Asian Peoples opens on the second floor.
1981 The Arthur Ross Hall of Meteorites opens on the first floor.
1982 The Charles A. Dana Education Wing is completed. The wing includes new areas on the first floorthe Harold F. Linder Theater, the Henry Kaufmann Theater, and the Edith C. Blum Lecture Roomas well as previously existing facilities on the second floorthe Louis Calder Laboratory, the Andrew M. White Natural Science Center, and Frederick H. Leonhardt People Center.
1988 George D. Langdon, Jr., becomes President of the Museum.
1989 The Hall of South American Peoples opens on the second floor. The original South American hall opened in 1907 and closed in the 1960s.
|