Philadelphia Civil War Museum Under Fire For Plan to Lend Artifacts
By Deborah Fitts
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. - Pennsylvania officials are considering possible
legal remedies to prevent a substantial portion of one of the
largest and most venerable private collections of Civil War
artifacts in the country from being taken out of Philadelphia
for display in Richmond.
On Feb. 15, the Civil War Library & Museum announced creation
of a "strategic alliance" with the newly formed Tredegar
National Civil War Center Foundation. The Richmond-based nonprofit
is planning a $38 million museum in the historic Tredegar Iron
Works, and wants the Library & Museum to provide the bulk
of the Union story.
In a press release, library board chairman Michael Schwartz
called the plan "an exceptional opportunity to greatly
benefit the citizens of the greater Philadelphia area and the
greater Richmond region well beyond our borders and our imaginations."
In a telephone interview in early March, Alex Wise, president
of the Tredegar Foundation, explained that in exchange for loaning
the artifacts Tredegar will provide a "new venue"
for the library in Philadelphia, where its current home, at
1805 Pine St., is in poor repair and off the beaten track.
The new venue, Wise said, will also display items from the Richmond-based
Museum of the Confederacy and other collections, in "a
rotation of sharing of objects."
"Philadelphia would see a lot of stuff they don't have
now," Wise said. "You will have, in Richmond and Philadelphia,
Union, Confederate and African-American objects that tell the
whole story. It's going to be better
for all Americans."
Schwartz said the deal would mean a "revitalized"
library in a better location, with modern, "user-friendly"
exhib-its. "We're going to be able to bring to the greater
Delaware Valley the story not told before in the Northeast -
the African-American side and the Confederate side."
Some took a dimmer view.
Pennsylvania State Sen. Vincent Fumo and State Rep. James Roebuck,
both Democrats with Philadelphia districts, said in a joint
press statement that transfer of a portion of the library collection
to Richmond "could result in the dissolution of the collection
or its historical significance," and may even be illegal.
"This would be a major cultural and historical loss for
the city of Philadelphia," said Fumo, a 22-year veteran
of the senate and the ranking Democrat on the Appropriations
Committee.
Fumo's press secretary, Gary Tuma, said the library's current
board "may not have the legal right to transfer some of
their things out of the city and out of their control, depending
on the basis on which they were donated."
Fumo elicited support from Hope Fox Coates, great-great-granddaughter
of Union Gen. George Meade, a Philadelphian who is well represented
in the Library collection. Among his personal items there is
the uniform he wore at Gettysburg.
Coates told Fumo that Meade "lived, died and is buried
in Philadelphia. When our family gave his possessions to the
museum, we did so with the understanding that they were safe
here in Philadelphia along with those
items of the men he served with."
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania Attorney General Mike Fisher was researching
whether removal of the artifacts would violate the terms under
which the library received its collection. The Library was founded
in 1888 by MOLLUS, the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of
the United States, a Philadelphia-based fraternity of former
Union officers. The bulk of the items in the collection were
donated by veterans and their descendants.
A spokesman for Fisher said his office would conduct "a
thorough review" to determine the "intent of the donors"
as to whether the items could leave Philadelphia.
But Dan Larkin, the attorney representing the library, said
he was confident that no items, including the Meade relics,
were donated to the collection with the requirement that they
remain in Philadelphia.
The library "feels an enormous debt to the donors of these
items and their descendants," Larkin said, but "it
has the absolute right to do what it's doing."
Tredegar's Wise expressed regret that "Many of the positives
that I've tried to outline have gotten lost in some of the press
coverage. Once people begin to understand what the library gains
and what the City of Philadelphia gains, there will be a recognition
that this is a very good thing."
Wise asserted that much of the planning is still in the "concept"
stage. But he said he envisions "joint ownership and operation"
of the new venue in Philadelphia by the "joint venturers"
in the Tredegar project: the Tredegar Foundation; Ethyl Corp.,
which owns the Tredegar site and will lease it to the foundation;
John Motley, a collector of African-American items who is providing
his collection to Tredegar; the Museum of the Confederacy, which
will loan Confederate objects; the Commonwealth of Virginia,
which is providing startup funding; the Civil War Preservation
Trust; and the library. The Civil War Library & Museum signed
the seven-party agreement in January.
The "joint venturers" will have representatives on
the Tredegar Foundation 's 21-member board, Wise said. Items
will also be borrowed from the Smithsonian and the Army, but
they will not be represented on the board.
While Wise initially said that both the Richmond and Philadelphia
venues would be operated by the foundation, Schwartz and Larkin
said the Philadelphia site will be managed by the library "in
association with" the foundation. Like Wise, Larkin acknowledged
that there were "no final details."
Meanwhile, word of the library's plans sent a tremor through
other collections that have items on loan there. Philadelphia's
Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Museum & Library filed
suit Feb. 21 in the Court of Common Pleas to retrieve two items,
including one of the most unusual and best-known of all Civil
War relics: the stuffed head of Meade's warhorse, Old Baldy.
James J. Corsetti Jr., a lawyer representing the GAR Museum,
said the nine-member museum board decided on the course of action
after the library failed to respond to a certified letter Nov.
30 asking for the relics back. Besides the head of Old Baldy,
loaned to the library 22 years ago, Corsetti said the museum
loaned the head of a mule, "possibly a veteran," that
may have been stuffed "in mockery" of Old Baldy.
"They don't want these things leaving Philadelphia,"
said Corsetti. "We're worried about them getting shipped
off down to Richmond and disappearing or getting damaged."
Larkin, however, indicated that the library doesn't intend to
give Old Baldy up. "I don't think it belongs to them,"
he said. While it's true that the horse entered the collection
in the late 1970s, "It does not appear to me to have been
a loan," he said
.
Further, "There's a question whether the party now claiming
ownership is the entity that once held ownership."
The GAR museum was incorporated in 1926 by members of Post 2
of the Grand Army of the Republic to preserve thousands of books
and artifacts donated to the post by veterans. As others among
the city's 50 posts gradually closed, they donated their collections
to Post 2.
And MOLLUS weighed in with its own hint of legal action. MOLLUS
relinquished control of the library in 1986 when it turned the
collection over to a separate, nonprofit board, in hopes of
attracting museum professionals.
Benjamin Frick, past commander of MOLLUS's Pennsylvania commandery
and current judge advocate in chief of the national commandery,
said the organization, with 1000 members in 20 states, "vehemently
disagrees" with the library's plans. The library's self-appointed
board no longer has any MOLLUS members.
According to Frick, the $500,000 endowment that MOLLUS provided
has shrunk to a reported $50,000 to $70,000, and no paid staff
remain.
"An original purpose" of MOLLUS was that the collection
"was to stay in Philadelphia," Frick said. He acknowledged
that the library board may have altered the articles of incorporation
to state otherwise. But "We believe we have a legal claim
to ownership, as the founding organization that set it up to
be in Philadelphia," he said. "We have a legal responsibility
to
see that the donors' wishes are followed."
MOLLUS commissioned a study as long ago as 1992 to address the
library's flagging financial picture, and con-cluded that the
board needed to "reach out" to the state and the city
for grants, and to members and to the affluent Philadelphia
community for financial support. But nothing happened, Frick
said; "People were rebuffed when they attempted to help."
And last year when the well-heeled Union League of Philadelphia
negotiated a merger with the library that would have brought
the collection to a downtown building, the focus of a $5 million
capital campaign borne by the League, talks collapsed at the
last minute when the League rejected what they regarded as impossible
demands set by the library. [December 1999, April 2000 Civil
War News]
"We were very disappointed," Frick said.
Frick said MOLLUS was watching to see whether the attorney general
will take action. If Fisher doesn't act then MOLLUS will, he
predicted.
"We feel extremely strongly that this collection must stay
intact and it must stay here," said Frick, an attorney
in Bryn Mawr. "If the only way to do that is through legal
action, that's what we'll do."
As for Tredegar's Wise, he acknowledged that creating a new
venue for the library in Philadelphia will add to his $38 million
fundraising burden, which will be shouldered by a professional
fundraising organization. "We really haven't costed it
out," he said. "It's still going to be in the range
of $40 million."
The foundation so far has received $250,000 from the Commonwealth
of Virginia and expects another $250,000 in July, while about
$300,000 has been received in private gifts, grants and pledges,
according to Wise.
Opening of the Tredegar Center is targeted for 2003. Wise hailed
the "vision and professionalism" of the library board.
But Tuma, Sen. Fumo's spokesman, said the senator, a longtime
supporter of the library, believes the library board has failed
to reach out to local sources of financial support.
"The senator thinks anyone who made half an effort could
have raised interest here in the city itself," Tuma said.