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THE BIRMINGHAM (AL) NEWS | HAIL OF THE WILD

June 19, 2000
MIKE BOLTON News staff writer

OPELIKA
- A day in the life of George Mann is often like an episode from the Discovery Channel. Sometimes it's even like an out-take from the Crocodile Hunter.

There was the day in the picturesque Rockies when a huge elk came within feet of his camera lens. Then there was the day he was charged by a hungry, 13-foot-tall polar bear in the Northwest Territories. That bear fell to a single arrow fired in self defense.
For almost 40 years the Opelika native has traveled the North American continent with camera and bow in hand. He has longed to share the world he knows with others, but he always believed photographs and stories were inadequate to convey the magnificence of what he has seen. Mann was beaming last week, for he believes he has found the perfect answer.

The retired owner of a steel fabrication company saw a labor of love come to fruition recently when he opened the doors of a 35,000-square-foot natural history museum. The museum is already drawing rave reviews from those who have gone through the turnstiles.

"We went down there not knowing what to expect, and we were shocked," said Shonnie Taylor of the Alabama Bureau of Tourism and Travel. "It's already jumped high on our list of recommended places for anyone headed to that part of the state."

Mann Museum and Outdoors features more than 250 exhibits of wildlife, saltwater and freshwater fishes, reptiles and insects from North America. All of the wildlife - from a gila monster to the towering polar bear - is mounted full size.

Each animal is enclosed in glass and the exhibit tells a story. The diorama featuring a cautious mule deer, for instance, is a desert scene complete with scorpions and rattlesnakes. These scenes also include vegetation from the animal's natural range. Each exhibit includes a mural painted from pictures from the area where the animal was taken. From elk to wolves to otters and porcupines, Mann didn't take any shortcuts.

"People ask how long to build the museum, and I say two years, but it's something I've really been working on for 20 years," he said. "I got the idea in 1978 when I visited the Denver Museum of Natural History.

"I loved the idea, but I thought that museum was too off limits. It was kind of two-dimensional. I envisioned a museum where people could walk all around the displays and people could actually feel what the velvet on a deer's antlers feel like or what the coat of a mountain lion feels like.

"I just started thinking and planning in mind and over the years it just got bigger and bigger. It's obvious I had too much time on my hands." Personally financed Mann first considered financing the museum through a foundation, but eventually decided he wanted total control. The entire project was paid for out of his own pocket. He refuses to discuss how much money he spent, but a friend suggests the project has cost close to $2 million to date.

"There may come a day a long way down the road that I recoup the money (through admission prices), but that isn't what this is about," he said. "You can't have conservation without education. This is the only way a lot of people will ever get to see what is really out there and why it needs to be saved for future generations."

He spared no expense, his wife, Lucretia, said with a laugh. He hired an artist full time to work on the project and kept him when the museum opened to work on future additions. Fossils on display were carbon dated to find their ages.

When someone suggested it would be nice to have a place for meetings, Mann added a 200-seat room complete with a high-definition television and digital audio. When someone suggested live animals would be a nice touch, he added a 10-acre, fenced enclosure outdoors that allows children to hand-feed and pet deer, peacocks, turkeys and ducks.

The Mann Museum and Outdoors is not a self-built tribute to the owner. While the world-record-holding hunter took most of the animals in the museum with a bow - sometimes carrying them on his back for miles out of the wilderness - nowhere in the museum is Mann's name, or his hunting, mentioned.

Mann, who lives in the Alaskan wilderness up to six months each year, said the reactions of people who have seen the museum since its opening have already made the long hours of planning, hard work and investment worth the trouble.

"I was watching a group of kids going through here the other day," Mann said. "Some would walk ahead of the rest of the group and they'd come running back telling the others that they wouldn't believe what was around the corner.

"That's the kind of excitement I envisioned all those years when I was dreaming of building this place. I want to see every kid in every school in Alabama come through this place."
The museum includes the full North American families of bear, deer, skunk, quail, and wild turkey. Also featured are ducks, wolves, lynx, mountain lions, fox, otters, beaver and dozens of other animals.

Additional displays include authentic Indian and Eskimo clothing and tools, as well as an array of fossils and meteorites.

GOING PLACES | THE MAGAZINE FOR TODAY'STRAVELER
May-June 2000 Issue

New on the scene is the Mann Museum and Outdoors located in Opelika. The 34,000 square foot facility is positioned on a 10-acre tract which has a spring creek, wetland marsh and a lake on the property. You will find the museum is like no other in the world. Museum visitors will see a variety of animals, birds, fish and reptiles living in their habitats. Displays in the museum relate to the actual activity of the animals. Murals drawn around the exhibits portray exactly where the animal was captured, allowing spectators to see natural environments. Some of the exhibits among the many you can expect to view will be of the bear family (polar, grizzly, brown and black) of North America in life-activity scenes, as well as displays of foxes, wild turkey, quail, grouse species, mountain mammals and waterfowl of North America. Then you can look at the freshwater and saltwater game fish of Alabama, authentic fossils of the sabertooth tiger, parts of mastodon tusks and bones, a 40,000-year-old Dire wolf head made from an actual skull, a 163 million-year-old clam fossil, 200-year-old traps and other artifacts
COLUMBUS (GA) LEDGER-ENQUIRER | UP CLOSE WITH NATURE
Sunday, August 23, 1998
Bryan Brasher
There are few places on earth where a human can stand inches away from a 14-foot, upright polar bear or come nose to nose with a snarling pack of arctic wolves and live to tell about it. But come mid-April, such a place will open its doors in Opelika, Ala. George P. Mann and his son George E., owners of Opelika Metalfab, Inc., have already begun construction on Mann Museum and Outdoors - a 35,000-square-foot wildlife showcase aimed at educating people about animals from around the world and modern conservation. The mammoth-sized, $2 million facility will cover 10 acres just off I-85 at Exit 58. It will feature 74 separate exhibits with life-sized taxidermy mounts of hundreds of native and exotic animals in recreated scenes of their natural habitats. Visitors will be able to view the animals through glass cases from three different angles. Most of the animals to be displayed have been harvested by the Manns with bows and arrows during the last 18 years. But hunting won’t be the major focus of the new museum. “We’re not looking to build a glorified trophy room,” said George E. Mann. “Our theme is going to be ‘Conservation through Education.’ We want to build values - to pass on what we’ve picked up from the outdoors through the years.” The museum will have something for everyone. Besides the mounted displays, there will be a video room with approximately 20,000 feet of authentic wildlife film, dating back to 1930. The projector and screen will be available for classes, seminars and conferences. There will be a “Nature Walk” with wild bird feeders, birdhouses and blinds for observation and photography. A live female deer will be available for hand feeding. And there will be a touch-and-feel display for the kids. “Young and old will benefit from this,” George E. Mann said. “It’ll be a place where you can spend an hour or a half a day. But we hope people will take what they learn home with themwhen they leave." Through the years, the Mann family has racked up its share of hunting accomplishments, including the Boone & Crockett bow and arrow state record whitetail and the second largest polar bear ever harvested. And while hunting won't be the major focus of the museum, won’t be totally excluded. Boone & Crockett, Pope & Young, the Alabama Wildlife Federation, the U.S. Dept. of Interior and the National Wild Turkey Federation will all be well-represented. The hunting element also will be present in a retail store adjacent to the museum, which will sell camouflage, treestands and other hunting supplies. “We believe hunting is an important part of conservation,” George E. Mann said. “But more than anything, we want people to understand how nature works. We’re not looking to hide anything. There will be some brutal footage. But it’s the same things that have been happening in the wild for thousands of years.”
OPELIKA-AUBURN (AL) NEWS | MANN MUSEUM OPENS IN OPELIKA
Friday, March 17, 2000
Brett Buckner


After months of planning, years of work and more than a decade of dreams, the Mann Museum and Outdoors will become a reality by opening its doors to the public Saturday with a 10 a.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony featuring Lt. Governor Steve Windom as well as other state and local offficials. Housed in a 35,000 square foot facility, the Mann Museum is a study in natural history and conservation with its wide variety of animals placed in their natural environments with tremendous care to detail. Every piece of stone, plant life and ground covering featured in the display is indigenous to the animal’s region. The concept behind the true-to-life displays is to give museum visitors a window into a world they may never see in person, said museum founder George P. Mann. “The Mann Museum and Outdoors offers the opportunity to come face-to-face with animals and environments most people would never otherwise see,” he said. The life-activity exhibits at the museum include the full North American families of deer, bear, skunk, quail, duck and wild turkey. Other featured animals include fox, lynx, moose, bobcat, beaver and otter. North American waterfowl are included with a display on the waterfowl of Kodiak Island, Alaska. Fish include freshwater and saltwater species of Alabama and game fish of southeast Alaska, including salmon, trout and char.


Opelika-Auburn News "MANN’S BEST FRIENDS”
Sunday, March 19, 2000
Brett Buckner


The hunger and cunning instincts of each animal still exist around every darkened corner. Though their hearts no longer pound with anticipation, their muscles remain tense, staring through blinkless eyes waiting for the moment to pounce and feed or play. Their everyday lives remain frozen in scenes of survival encased in glass to teach us all a lesson about the wilderness and the animals that thrive there. The newly opened Mann Museum and Outdoors is the culmination of George P. Mann’s obsession with the environment and animals he fell in love with as a child hunting with his father. The 35,000-square foot museum features more than 200 exhibits of animals and predators, large and small, encased in painfully detailed displays of their natural setting, with every stone, blade of vegetation and co-habitant placed and mounted just as they lived in the wild. Each display also features hand-painted, picture-perfect backdrops of each animal’s world. This is a project that’s been years in the making for Mann and his family. Though the museum and its collection have continued to swell and engulf the regular lives of its owners, it’s all been for love of the game, said George E. Mann, son of the elder Mann. “This has grown into so much more than we expected,” he said with an exhausted laugh. “It’s been one of those painful experiences that’s real rewarding once it’s finally completed.” The excruciating attention paid to detail which included weeks of work spent on single exhibits, was done for the benefit of the public, not the Mann family, who harvested most of the animals. “We did not build this for the people to know the amount of blood, sweat and tears that went into building this museum,” Mann said. “What we’re trying to do is pass on wildlife conservation through education. We want to teach the young and old about wildlife because we believe appreciation is something that’s taught, not absorbed.” Though most of the animals were harvested by the Mann family for food, this is a museum about conservation, not hunting, said Ira Silberman, vice president and general manager for the museum. “This really isn’t about hunting or fishing,” he said. “It’s about teaching people to appreciate wildlife. Part of wildlife conservation is hunting because it helps to keep diseases out. “It’s all a necessary part of the process.” To the curious visitors, especially children, the animals on display at the Mann Museum are familiar only from programs on The Discovery Channel and Animal Planet. These beasts are not likely to be seen roaming around Chewacla Park, Mann said “It’s all very child oriented,” he said. “Part of it is the excitement of seeing bears, wolves, moose and other animals that before they’ve only seen on TV. Certain animals just have an appeal for children.” The museum’s cast of furry characters includes the deer, bear, skunk, quail, mountain mammals, waterfowl, fox and cats of North America, as well as all the fresh and saltwater game fish of Alabama and the anadromous game fish of southeast Alaska. In addition to the animal scenes, the Mann Museum also features a Danger Section, exhibiting a number of poisonous insects, venomous reptiles and toxic plants, as well as a large collection of fossils and authentic Native American artifacts. Silberman isn’t the least bit concerned about getting children to overcome their boredom complex at the utterance of the word “museum.” The problem might rest with the parents. “It’s what they see that’ll get them excited,” he said. “This is not just a bunch of old relics and stones. These are animals that most kids have only dreamed of seeing and everything is done with children in mind. “The problem won’t be getting children in the museum. It’ll be how will parents get the kids to leave?” Despite the immense collection already on display, the Mann family has big plans for the future, Mann said. “I hope to see this museum become an icon for the community,” he said. “We have many plans for growth and expansion in the future. I hope that one day my grandkids will come here to educate their children about wildlife conservation.” “This museum is forever a work in progress.”
THE BAYONET (FT. BENNING, GA) | MANN MUSEUM OFFERS FAMILY-FILLED FUN
Wednesday, November 22, 2000
Bridget Siter

My youngest son got his hunting permit last week, and he's been counting the days till he could go hunting with his dad. It was supposed to happen Sunday after church, but the weather was just too rainy and cold. I could see the disappointment on his face, but I was secretly relieved. Does a mom ever get over the fear of her child with a gun? To make it up to him, I suggested we whet our appetites for big game at the Mann Museum in Opelika, Ala. Jacob was not enthused. When it comes to choosing a fun-filled family activity, museums rank somewhere between the doctor's office and the public library. We heard quite a bit of grumbling during the 40-mile drive, but it stopped the minute we pulled into the parking lot of the Mann Museum. "Dad, look! Those are real," Jacob said, pointing to a head of deer grazing near the museum. "And look it says we can feed them." Now if there's one thing Jacob likes better than hunting deer, its feeding them. Go figure. His enthusiasm didn't wane inside the museum, where he found "everything you can imagine, Mom." And indeed, there was 35,000 square feet, and more than 250 exhibits, of every kind of North American wildlife imaginable - bear (grizzly, brown, black and polar), moose, elk, caribou, skunk, fox, lynx, waterfowl, shark, and countless others. The museum is the fulfillment of a life-long dream for George P. Mann, an Opelika resident and nationally renowned outdoorsman. He's been an ardent conservationist and bow hunter all his life, and the Mann Museum and Outdoors, which includes a nature trail and animal sanctuary, is a testimony to Mann's desire to teach wildlife conservation through education. Mann spends about six months out of the year in the Alaskan wilderness. He's brought back some of the finest examples of big game ever taken with a bow and arrow, including a 10 and a half foot polar bear and the fourth largest grizzly ever killed with a bow. I've seen my share of taxidermy, but I was amazed at the artful and realistic way each exhibit is displayed. They're all prepared using real vegetation and rocks that are indigenous to the animal's natural habitat. In fact, Mann's gone that extra mile to make sure you feel you've happened upon these creatures in their own back yard. If you look real close at the "World's Biggest Deer" display, the Alaskan Moose, you'll even see moose droppings among the dried vegetation. Never mind that Mann back-packed the moose from the hinterlands to humanity, with a few native rocks and plants - what Jacob can't fathom is "how exactly did he get that poop here?" and "why?" We were all impressed with the Mann Museum, including my husband, who was admittedly a bit skeptical about spending a Sunday afternoon at a museum. The guys were most impressed with the larger mammals and the carnivores. The girls liked all the cute and cuddly animals and the hands-on "touch and feel" displays. I liked the artwork. The display murals were painted by a local artist, Anderson (Luster), who has an incredible gift for duplicating natural panoramas. And for those who think a wildlife museum isn't a refined cultural experience, Mann's included various bronze sculptures by Henry Inchumuk.