Fund Charlotte Museum of History for FY26!

Terri White
Terri White
Charlotte, NC, United StatesCreated May 23, 2025

Fund Charlotte Museum of History for FY26!

Terri White
Terri White
Charlotte, NC, United States
Created May 23, 2025

The Issue

Did you know the Charlotte Museum of History is the only major arts & cultural organization in Charlotte that receives no regular operating support from the city or county? In fact, for 2025 the City of Charlotte awarded more than $8.6 million in operating grants to 33 local arts organizations, but the museum was not on that list. The city did award the museum a one-time, $100,000 grant from its American Rescue Plan Act funding. But as of today, the Charlotte Muesum of History is still not on the list of arts groups that receive regular operating funds from the city to keep them strong and serving Charlotte. The museum needs your help to reverse this decision and ask that the City of Charlotte equitably fund CMH to ensure that the history of the Queen City is saved, preserved, and exhibited for generations to come.
 
CMH is the oldest history museum in the city, they take care of the oldest home in the county, and they are the only museum actively advocating for historic preservation in Charlotte. They are also the museum that saved the historic Siloam School, relocating it to their 8-acre campus in East Charlotte, a Corridor of Opportunity for the city. It is a mistake that such a major organization was left off the list of regular grant recipients in the first place, and the city needs to make this right.
 
The museum has not received municipal funds for operating expenses in almost 20 years, and it did not receive municipal funds to help it survive through the COVID-19 pandemic. Their survival through it all shows that they are not only a strong and necessary organization, but that they are also worthy of city support.
 
In recent years, their board and staff have listened carefully to what the community wants, and they have taken that feedback to heart, making major cultural and programmatic shifts in how they operate. They support smaller non-profits by allowing them to host their events for free in their spaces, and they have focused on collaborations with other organizations in the region including the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Library, Opera Carolina, the Carolinas Asian American Chamber of Commerce, the Catawba Nation, Fiestas Patrias and more.
 
In addition to their innovative history programs and outreach, they are the stewards of essential and irreplaceable pieces of Charlotte’s history in the form of five historic buildings on an 8-acre campus in east Charlotte that they preserve, protect, and interpret for the public. These include the 1774 Alexander Rock House and the much-loved Siloam School. Without consistent and sustainable sources of funding, they have been left with no choice but to delay major repairs and upgrades to their facilities, including these historic spaces that are on the National Register of Historic Places.
 
The history of this city is quite literally why the Charlotte Museum of History exists, but a financial model without ongoing municipal support cannot sustain the kind of robust history museum that the city of Charlotte deserves. 
 
The Charlotte Museum of History is the only site in the county with direct ties to the Meck Dec and the ideals of freedom and liberty that it represents. No arts organization in our city is better poised to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Meck Dec this year or America’s semi-quincentennial in 2026 than Charlotte Museum of History. In fact, the museum just opened a new Meck Dec 250 exhibit commemorating Charlotte's first-in-the-nation status when it comes to declaring its freedom. 
 
Financially, the museum is asking for $750,000 from the city for FY26 - $400,000 in operating funds (still below what many of its peer organizations already receive) and $350,000 in one-time special projects funds to support the new blockbuster exhibit, "American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibit," which will bring significant tourism and economic support to the city and especially to East Charlotte, in 2026 and beyond. This is on par with what other museums of their size receive, and it will enable them to continue providing diverse history programming and community outreach while completing urgent facilities and technological upgrades so that they can continue to serve the community.
 
We are asking the City Council to do the right and equitable thing and provide the Charlotte Museum of History with their requested funding for FY26 and that they revise their list of favored arts organizations for funding.

681

The Issue

Did you know the Charlotte Museum of History is the only major arts & cultural organization in Charlotte that receives no regular operating support from the city or county? In fact, for 2025 the City of Charlotte awarded more than $8.6 million in operating grants to 33 local arts organizations, but the museum was not on that list. The city did award the museum a one-time, $100,000 grant from its American Rescue Plan Act funding. But as of today, the Charlotte Muesum of History is still not on the list of arts groups that receive regular operating funds from the city to keep them strong and serving Charlotte. The museum needs your help to reverse this decision and ask that the City of Charlotte equitably fund CMH to ensure that the history of the Queen City is saved, preserved, and exhibited for generations to come.
 
CMH is the oldest history museum in the city, they take care of the oldest home in the county, and they are the only museum actively advocating for historic preservation in Charlotte. They are also the museum that saved the historic Siloam School, relocating it to their 8-acre campus in East Charlotte, a Corridor of Opportunity for the city. It is a mistake that such a major organization was left off the list of regular grant recipients in the first place, and the city needs to make this right.
 
The museum has not received municipal funds for operating expenses in almost 20 years, and it did not receive municipal funds to help it survive through the COVID-19 pandemic. Their survival through it all shows that they are not only a strong and necessary organization, but that they are also worthy of city support.
 
In recent years, their board and staff have listened carefully to what the community wants, and they have taken that feedback to heart, making major cultural and programmatic shifts in how they operate. They support smaller non-profits by allowing them to host their events for free in their spaces, and they have focused on collaborations with other organizations in the region including the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Library, Opera Carolina, the Carolinas Asian American Chamber of Commerce, the Catawba Nation, Fiestas Patrias and more.
 
In addition to their innovative history programs and outreach, they are the stewards of essential and irreplaceable pieces of Charlotte’s history in the form of five historic buildings on an 8-acre campus in east Charlotte that they preserve, protect, and interpret for the public. These include the 1774 Alexander Rock House and the much-loved Siloam School. Without consistent and sustainable sources of funding, they have been left with no choice but to delay major repairs and upgrades to their facilities, including these historic spaces that are on the National Register of Historic Places.
 
The history of this city is quite literally why the Charlotte Museum of History exists, but a financial model without ongoing municipal support cannot sustain the kind of robust history museum that the city of Charlotte deserves. 
 
The Charlotte Museum of History is the only site in the county with direct ties to the Meck Dec and the ideals of freedom and liberty that it represents. No arts organization in our city is better poised to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Meck Dec this year or America’s semi-quincentennial in 2026 than Charlotte Museum of History. In fact, the museum just opened a new Meck Dec 250 exhibit commemorating Charlotte's first-in-the-nation status when it comes to declaring its freedom. 
 
Financially, the museum is asking for $750,000 from the city for FY26 - $400,000 in operating funds (still below what many of its peer organizations already receive) and $350,000 in one-time special projects funds to support the new blockbuster exhibit, "American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibit," which will bring significant tourism and economic support to the city and especially to East Charlotte, in 2026 and beyond. This is on par with what other museums of their size receive, and it will enable them to continue providing diverse history programming and community outreach while completing urgent facilities and technological upgrades so that they can continue to serve the community.
 
We are asking the City Council to do the right and equitable thing and provide the Charlotte Museum of History with their requested funding for FY26 and that they revise their list of favored arts organizations for funding.

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Petition created on May 23, 2025