Hi Rachel,

Everyone I know recently is trying to give pianos. I swear this is the 3rd
time I've seen this question in the span of a month!

Some suggestions, since most of the museums I know don't really have the
room or the capabilities to care for these instruments.

1. I would talk to a local pianist/organist  We have a piano at the home
I'm the director of and we've got a great relationship with a tuner who
specializes in old and historic pianos. He's been able to tell me so much
about our instrument. (Best way to find gems like him is to ask organists
and pianists. They'll be able to find fixers/tuners who work freelance and
don't have the same constraints as those who work for big stores, etc.)
2. If they're in good condition, see if there's any theaters, youth music
programs, schools, etc, who might benefit from a donation. My accompaniest
just got rid of one of his pianos and ended up donating it to a local
theater program in his town.
3. Sometimes churches are looking for pianos and organs.
4. Best bet is to spread the word through your local music community. Tell
church organists, music teachers, musicians, theater members. They work in
a community and will spread the word. They'll want to see all the
instruments get good homes and will help. Sometimes there are regional
Facebook groups that you can also post in for musicians (ie, the one I'm in
is Northeast Ohio Church Musicians). But the more people you tell, the more
it will spread into the little pockets of the community since there are so
many arms.

Good Luck!

Sammy Kay

Samantha Kay Smith

Director
Spring Hill Historic Home

[log in to unmask]
330-933-1298
@sammykay118


On Tue, Jul 24, 2018 at 3:13 PM Rachel Whitney <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Hello,
>
> I am the Museum Director for a small-town, small-museum in Oklahoma. We
> have little for our budget, and I have a few large items that the museum
> cannot take care of anymore. I am new to the small town, as well as, new to
> the museum world. Most of my board members have lived in the town all their
> lives, but no one has ever worked in a museum or the very least dealt with
> archival/collection.
>
> In my museum's collection are several items that we cannot take care -
> they have never been taken care of since they were donated to the museum
> approx. 20 years ago. I have 1 grand piano and 2 organs. They're
> surprisingly in pretty good/fair condition, however, I know they are not
> being taking care of because a) they're in storage - where there is no a/c,
> humidity control, and mold in the building, b) these items have no
> connection to the town and our mission statement, c) there are no
> documentation on how we received these items or who they had belonged to or
> significance to person and the town. What can/should I do? We don't need
> them, but we can't move them, either - but if we can, we will adjust the
> moving of these items to our budget.
>
> Thank you,
> Rachel Whitney
>
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