The
Walters Art Museum, located in
Mount Vernon-Belvedere,
Baltimore,
Maryland, is a
public art museum founded and opened in 1934, with collections created during the mid-19th Century. The Museum's collection was amassed substantially by major American art and sculpture collectors, a father and son:
William Thompson Walters (William T. Walters), (1819–1894), who began serious collecting when he moved to
Paris as a nominal Southern/
Confederate sympathizer at the outbreak of the
American Civil War in 1861; and
Henry Walters (1848–1931), who refined the collection and made arrangements for the construction of a later landmark building to rehouse it. After allowing the Baltimore public to occasionally view his father's and his growing added collections at his West Mount Vernon Place townhouse/mansion during the late 1800s, he arranged for an elaborate stone
palazzo-styled structure built for that purpose in 1905–1909, which he then occasionally opened its doors for citizens to tour the rapidly growing collections. Located across the back alley, a block south of the Walters mansion on West Monument Street/Mount Vernon Place, on the northwest corner of
North Charles Street at West Centre Street, (at South Washington Place).