I asked earlier how many museums are there in the USA &
receiving excellent replies. The answer, about 8200 (+)
museums (1989 "Museum Count" AAM report). That
breaks down to 55% historic sites/musuems; 15% art
museums and 15% science related. The remaining 15%
are speciality museums.
Out of that is the puzzeling questions -- how many of
the 8200 (+) are totally not-for-profit; private or public?
How many are really "small" museums? Does the various
funding make you small, medium or large?
How many artifacts (is there a limit?) before you
are no longer a "small" museum? 25,000, 150,000
a million artifacts? How large can your budget go
before you are no longer a "small" musuem? Would
a 2 to 10 million dollar budget be a small museum?
AAM states there must be so many paid, professional
staff? But how many employees brings the museum into a "larger"
museum status? How many visitors do "small" museums
have in relationship to large, does attendance determine
small museums? Does the population the museum serves?
Our budget is approximately $150,000 to $180,000. Two
full-time staff, 3 part-time/seasonal. 27,000 artifacts.
The museum serves a small, rural community of about
60,000, with the nearest large city about 42 miles away.
19,000 to 22,000 annual visitors. A nonprofit, no local
support, no state support, no federal support (except a
few small grants). A $3.00 gate admission is charged,
and rely on donations, store sales, and memorials.
I believe population base, budget, number of artifacts,
employees, funding status, etc. determines if you are a
small or large museum. This would also include endowments,
if a museum had 15 million (+), would it be a small museum?
If a museum has not capital investments, no collection these
factors may determine what a "small" museum really is.
These are simply questions and a survey. Opinions are
welcome. Thanks
John Martinson
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Work: Fort Walla Walla Museum
755 Myra Rd
Walla Walla, WA 99364
(509) 525-7703 (Work)
Let's not forget our past
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