(OH) Opening of gun museum delayed

Drizzt

New member
Opening of gun museum delayed


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allows more time for development


By The Associated Press

LOUISVILLE — Weapons aficionados will have to wait another year to see a vast assortment of arms put together by a local collector.

The Owsley Brown Frazier Historical Arms Museum is now scheduled to open in spring 2004 in downtown Louisville, giving organizers more time to develop the exhibits.

It also allows more time to raise money to help Mr. Frazier, a local philanthropist and retired vice chairman of Brown-Forman Corp., pay the estimated $30 million cost of renovating and equipping the museum, officials said.

Museum officials will also have more time to refine an arrangement with the Royal Armouries of England, which will provide ancient weaponry to the Frazier museum.

The museum has an unusual theme, with a new staff and collaboration between an American and European museum, museum curator Walter Karcheski Jr. said. “The end result (of the delay) will be a much better project.”

“Everyone is happy” with the delay, said Guy Wilson, master, or staff chief, of the British Armouries. “It gives us more time to think, for research” and to develop the exhibits.

The museum will exhibit hundreds of pieces from Mr. Frazier's arms collection, including President Theodore Roosevelt's “Big Stick,” the famous rifle he carried on an African expedition.

Other pieces are expected to include an 1866 Winchester carbine presented to “Buffalo Bill” Cody and guns owned by Gen. George Armstrong Custer.

The museum also will display British and European armor and weapons from the 11th century, courtesy of the Royal Armouries.

Mr. Frazier bought the four-story building that will house the collection last year. Much of the required interior demolition is done, but work has slowed now, Mr. Karcheski said.

The museum will have about 100,000 square feet of space. Nearly half of that will be for exhibits, with the rest used for offices, classrooms, a 150-seat auditorium, storage and shop space, a museum store, and a cafe, Mr. Karcheski said.

http://enquirer.com/editions/2002/10/09/loc_opening_of_gun.html
 
Had a sneak preview earlier this year. :eek: They have some real treasures and I wish them well. I wonder what the name of the cafe will be? Blood n' Bullets? FMJ Cafe? Mess hall? Chow Line? Reloading Room?
 
Last edited:

Hal

New member
Had a sneak preview earlier this year
And you kept that info on what we can expect to see to yourself!?!?!?

50 lashes with a used cleaning patch is in order ;)

Just kidding.

Sounds like a great place to take my Grandson when it opens. By 2004, he'll be 4 years old and ready to go a-gun-grazing with gramps. Cool!Louisville's only about 40 min from where I'm sitting. Tour the museum,,bee-bop on down I77 to Fort Laurens and an afternoon picnic on the Fort Laurens grounds,,,ahhhhhhh,,,Don't get much better than that.
 
Top