This small museum celebrates the life and work of the man who, as City Governor, changed the face of Santiago in the mid-nineteenth century.
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Vicuña Mackenna 94, Santiago, Chile
Mon-Fri 9:30am-5:30pm, Sat 10am-2pm
Free
Picture from the Santa Lucía Album made by Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna in 1874.
The Museum, on the street named after Vicuña Mackenna, is housed in a building on the site where he once had his house. All that remains of the original house, built in around 1871, is the part where Vicuña Mackenna worked, including his library, which can still be seen much as it was in his time. It was declared a National Monument in 1992.
The Museum traces the life of Vicuña Mackenna through three rooms that also provide an insight into the political and social elite of which he was a member as well as showing the development of Santiago. Its collection includes:
In addition, the Library contains over 10,000 volumes, including Vicuña Mackenna’s own library and those of his son-in law, Luis Orrego Luco, and grandson Eugenio Orrego Vicuña. It also includes copies of his writings and those of his contemporaries.