Years ago there was a very good fly fishing museum at Granville Island with amazing exhibits but it closed maybe 10+ years ago. I was very sad to see it go.
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It was a very nice little gem of a place. I stumbled on it about thirty years ago and bought a poster that I still have around here somewhere. I’ll see if I can dig it out and share here.Years ago there was a very good fly fishing museum at Granville Island with amazing exhibits but it closed maybe 10+ years ago. I was very sad to see it go.
www.affm.net.au
Greg, that’s such a great poster from a sorely missed place. I wish I could go back in time and visit there again. Back then I had read a lot of the fly fishing classic writers both East Coast and PNW and I had an appreciation for classic gear but my interest and knowledge about classic gear is deeper now and I bet my appreciation for their collections would be even greater now. Thanks for sharing that.I found the poster from the Granville Island museum in Vancouver BC.
There was an outstanding collection of “mint” condition old fly reels, among others as shown…
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Hehehe...while my lovely wife was downright excited to roam around the incredible market at Granville, I was downright excited to visit that museum across the parking lot. It's rare to find such a perfect pairing on earth, LOL.I agree Ron. Museums are meant to pique our curiosity and to make us think, and that little place certainly did that for me. It helped me to appreciate the traditions of our sport, and particularly the really cool old gear that was used, especially in our local fisheries.
I was sad to hear that it had closed, but feel fortunate to have stumbled across i. It was pretty amazing.

Cushner collection was purchased by the Grandville Island collection which sold a few pieces off and after the fellow passed on, the family donated the remainder to the Atlantic Salmon Museum in Dork Town.Not to be windy but I’ll pass on a couple observations. I only went once, sometime mid 90s I think. Cushner was a stamp curator as I recall, but an expert at framing things. Had some remarkable tools and lathes of old in his basement. Precision stuff not made for maybe 100 years. His collection had a lot of bamboo and creels from famous Catskills anglers of the past, exquisitely framed flies from many of them as well as some from west coasters like Lani Waller, and drawers with hundreds of gut (no eye loop) flies still in their sleeves from a famous east coast outfitter (don’t recall name now) that closed their doors in the 60s. It’s in a house he lived in, and I presume his SIL may today. When Cushner retired he moved West to Florence to be near his daughter.
Thanks for sharing that detail...I always wondered what happened to Cushner's collection. (Dork Town????)Cushner collection was purchased by the Grandville Island collection which sold a few pieces off and after the fellow passed on, the family donated the remainder to the Atlantic Salmon Museum in Dork Town.
www.atlanticsalmonmuseum.com