Shenandoah Valley Museum. The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley is located at 901 Amherst Street, Winchester, Virginia.
   The Museum endeavours to preserve and enrich the cultural life and heritage of the Valley. Located on the largest green space in the city of Winchester, the MSV is a regional cultural center including a museum designed by Michael Graves, seven acres of formal gardens, and the Glen Burnie House dating to the 18th century.
   The MSV complex consists of three main components. The Glen Burnie Historic House traces its history to surveyor James Wood, who settled this land in the early 18th century and donated portions of his land to establish the city of Winchester, Virginia in 1744.
   His son Robert Wood constructed the central portion of the Glen Burnie Historic House in the 1790s. The house's ownership passed through several generations of Wood and then Glass families until Julian Wood Glass Jr., acquired it in 1955.
   Julian Wood Glass Jr. was the last descendant of James Wood to own the Glen Burnie Historic House. Beginning in 1959, and aided by his partner R. Lee Taylor, Glass transformed the house into a country estate, and the couple designed the Glen Burnie Gardens. Glass created the Glass-Glen Burnie Foundation prior to his death in 1992, and entrusted the Foundation to open the site to the public as a museum. The Glen Burnie Historic House & Gardens opened to the public in 1998. Today, i
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