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• 2016 — The Museum further increased its public hours, adopting the same year-round public hours <br />(20 hours per week) instead of changing the hours for fall/winter and spring/summer. (Also, <br />appointments for meetings with the public and appointments for tours are routinely held outside of <br />the public hours.) The Museum was networked with the rest of the City and the Museum was added <br />to the new City phone system, leading to efficiencies. The number of paid memberships reached 734. <br />The Museum celebrates its 30th anniversary of being open the public. <br />IV. Description of the Museum Campus <br />Tomeo House <br />The Tomeo family built the Tomeo House in circa 19041908. Volunteers made repairs to prepare it for <br />opening to visitors in 1986. It consists of two bedrooms and a kitchen, and has never had a bathroom or <br />running water. It is 750 square feet, including a small partially dirt cellar that is now used for a furnace. <br />This house focuses attention on domestic life. It was the home of the Felix and Michelena Tomeo family <br />in the early 1900s, followed by widow, Grace Rossi, and her six children from the 1920s to the 1940s. <br />The house presents opportunities for talking about Louisville's Italian heritage and the human stories of <br />the house's former residents. <br />The Tomeo House is the only building on the campus that fits the definition of a "historic house <br />museum." Its unique offering is that it's the only building in the Louisville area that gives an authentic <br />look at how people lived. It is very modest and has never been remodeled. With its absence of running <br />water and with small rooms, it conveys domestic life and the lack of affluence in Louisville like nothing <br />else can. With two different Italian families having lived in the house, it is also used to convey <br />information about Italian culture in Louisville. Visitors often have emotional reactions to learning that a <br />widow and her six children lived in this small, three-room house, and they often relate the house and <br />what it represents to the struggles of their own families. <br />Jacoe Store <br />The Jacoe Store was built in circa 1905-06 as a false front business building on Main Street. Eliseo and <br />Ann Jacoe operated it as one of Louisville's small grocery stores from 1923-1958 and catered to the <br />town's large Italian population. A repainted Coca-Cola sign on its south side makes the building <br />particularly recognizable. Volunteers made repairs to the interior of the Jacoe Store. It opened to the <br />public in 1990 and consists of 1320 square feet, including a partially dirt cellar that is used for general <br />storage and the storage of artifacts that don't require strict climate control. The Jacoe Store is where <br />Museum visitors first arrive and where staff and volunteers work. Exhibits focus on Louisville's <br />commercial and mining history. <br />The Jacoe Store is the location of the only restroom facilities at the Museum. It offers one toilet and a <br />sink in a small bathroom that is not ADA accessible and is inadequate for general public usage. <br />Jordinelli House and Summer Kitchen <br />The owners of the Jordinelli House and Summer Kitchen at 1000 La Farge Ave. donated them to the City <br />of Louisville in 2001 and the City paid to have them moved to the Museum campus at that time. <br />5 <br />