In Texas Tradition, Museums That Enshrine the Quirky
McLEAN, Tex. No one can remember if the brassiere factory on Kingsley Street here put up barbed wire to keep intruders out. These days, hundreds of strands of barbed wire draw people in.
The old factory building is now home to the Devils Rope Museum, a sprawling tribute to the history of barbed wire and fencing tools. It is a wayward cows worst nightmare: Bent-corner plate barb, double-plate locked link wire, Baggers 1876 barbed single-strand rod and in the Rare Wire exhibit, protected from the public and overzealous collectors in a glass case Dodges rotating star barb and fixed star on single strand from 1881.
In McLean, a town of about 800 east of Amarillo in the Texas Panhandle, the museum is a bona fide tourist attraction: Anita Seaney, the curator, said it had 6,000 visitors last year.
Its our little contribution to history, said Ms. Seaney, 69, standing near the display of post hole diggers. We have 500 or 600 different kinds of barbed wire. I havent counted. The guy that can probably answer most of your questions lives down around Fort Worth, and he counted them one day, but we didnt write it down.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/20/us/in-texas-tradition-museums-that-enshrine-the-quirky.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120320