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Louisville Historical Museum <br />Collections Management Policy <br />Draft —June 2015 <br />1. Introduction <br />1.1 General Introduction <br />Louisville Historical Museum <br />Collections Management Policy <br />Draft — June 2015 <br />The Louisville Historical Museum ( "Museum ") constitutes a division, alongside the Louisville <br />Public Library, in the City of Louisville's Department of Library & Museum Services. The Museum <br />buildings and collections are owned by the City of Louisville, and the Museum staff members are <br />City employees. <br />Volunteers started the Museum in the 1980s. Although the doors of the Museum didn't open to <br />the public until 1986, the first gift was received in 1984 and its accession number reflects that <br />year of donation. The Museum was completely volunteer- operated, with volunteers for the City <br />accepting gifts and conducting cataloging activities as well as engaging in other activities, until <br />1999, when the City hired a paid Museum staff member for the first time. However, volunteer <br />help has continued to be vital to the registration and cataloging process and to the general <br />operation of the Museum, over the years. <br />The Museum campus, where the public visits the Museum, where the collections are stored, <br />and where staff and volunteers work, is at 1001 Main Street in Louisville. Several historic <br />buildings comprise the Museum. The Jacoe Store was a grocery store and is now the main <br />building of the Museum. Its exhibit areas interpret Louisville's mining, agricultural, and <br />commercial history. This building contains the only office area on the campus and it is part of <br />the space open to the public. The three -room Tomeo House is interpreted as a mining family's <br />house. The Jordinelli House and Summer Kitchen were both moved to the campus in 2001 from <br />1000 La Farge Ave. The Jordinelli House contains a replica of original downtown Louisville in one <br />room that has been open to the public since October 2014. Staff and volunteers use the replica <br />to talk with visitors about the development of Louisville. Last, an outhouse was moved to the <br />site from Rockvale, Colorado in 2005. The Jacoe Store, Tomeo House, and Jordinelli House are <br />climate controlled. <br />The Museum's collections are stored in different locations in these buildings. Items needing <br />climate control are in a small storage room in the Jacoe Store and in four small rooms of the <br />Jordinelli House. Some items not needing strict climate control, such as metal tools, are stored <br />in the Summer Kitchen and in the cellar of the Jacoe Store. The cellar of the Tomeo House, <br />which is only large enough to contain a furnace, is not used for collections storage of any kind. <br />1 <br />