
Esteemed Cultural Visionary Prepares to Pass the Torch at Cherished Boston Institution Next Summer
BOSTON, Sept. 30, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Boston Children’s Museum has announced that President & CEO Carole Charnow will retire in August 2026, at which point she will become the second-longest serving President in the Museum’s 112-year history. Upon her retirement, Charnow will be honored with the title of President Emerita.
With Charnow’s guidance, Boston Children’s Museum has become a leader in informal, early education both nationally and internationally. The institution has provided resources to schools, libraries, museums, homeless shelters, and community centers throughout Massachusetts and the United States. Her leadership oversaw the renovation of three permanent exhibitions and numerous improvements to the Museum’s 135-year-old building, ensuring its legacy as a destination for more than 450,000 annual visitors.
During her fifteen-year tenure, Charnow presided over Boston Children’s Museum’s strongest financial period in its history. Under her visionary leadership, the Museum has raised over $75M in two major campaigns, in addition to several significant programmatic and capital grants, including $10M for flood resilience, which will protect the Museum from the threat of climate change. Charnow has also retired two thirds of the Museum’s debt and doubled the Museum’s endowment.
“It has been the greatest honor to lead Boston Children’s Museum these past fifteen years. I am so grateful to the outstanding staff and Board, who have ensured that the Museum has stayed vibrant, relevant, and financially sound,” said Carole Charnow, President & CEO. “I am thankful to the many individuals, foundations, and corporations who have supported the Museum over so many years. I look forward to working with the next leader to ensure that the Museum continues in its critically important service to the community long into the future.”
Charnow’s significant achievements and initiatives as President and CEO include:
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Working closely with Mayor Michelle Wu and other Museum leaders, Charnow and her team were founders of Boston Family Days, a free admission program for Boston school children and their families.
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The Museum’s recent efforts to combat sea-level rise have resulted in an imaginative resilience masterplan described by civic leaders as an innovative example of how institutions can protect their property and neighborhood, while providing engaging and educational opportunities for their communities. Construction will begin this Fall on Phase 1 of the plan.
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The Museum was awarded the IMLS National Medal, the nation’s highest honor conferred on museums for extraordinary service to the community, presented by First Lady, Michelle Obama, at the White House in 2013.
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Alongside then Mayor Martin Walsh and the Richard Family, establishing Martin’s Park adjacent to the Museum, a 1.5-acre, accessible park and playground.
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Founding of the region’s first museum access program for families receiving benefits, the EBT Discount Initiative, today known as the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s Card to Culture Program, which is offered in 450 museums and cultural institutions across the state, and was also the model for the nation-wide Museums for All program.
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The Museum’s pioneering new exhibition, You, Me, We, tackles the complex subjects of race, bias and empathy, and won the national American Alliance of Museums Excellence in DEAI Award in 2024.
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The Museum’s groundbreaking program on Religious Literacy is the first for a children’s museum.
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A science and engineering department, encompassing a STEAM lab, multiple grant programs, and curriculum materials which are used in 80 state school districts, programs, and exhibits.
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Other inventive programming included:
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An innovative performing arts program
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BCM Summer Camp
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The Boston Grown-Ups Museum
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An imaginative program of special events such as the Hundred Acre Wood, Winnie the Pooh Experience, the Snowmazing winter festival, the Halloween Spooktacular, and…
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The annual Wonder BallFundraiser, which has raised millions of dollars for the Museum’s free and discounted admissions, making up over a third of their visitation each year.
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