Adams was a trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art for almost 40 years, and served in various capacities. He was a member and treasurer of the special committee for the acquisition of casts and reproductions; chairman of the Finance Committee (1905–1920), and a member of various committees, including the Executive Committee (1910–1931), the Building Committee, the Committee on Educational Work, the Committee on Prints, and the Library Committee.[3]
He also made many gifts to the museum, including a collection of reproductions of the more noteworthy of the bronzes from Herculaneum, in the National Museum at Naples; a collection of photographs of Renaissance architecture and ornament, and of Renaissance and baroque sculpture, medals and many other pieces. He was elected a benefactor of the museum in 1909.[3]
Numismatic interests
Adams was active in the American Numismatic Society, where he was a council member and on many committees involved in publishing the society's medals.[7] He donated Japanese medals to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1906.[8]
References
^"Edward Dean Adams". Transactions of the Electrochemical Society. 59. 1931. Retrieved February 1, 2017.