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American Museum of Magic
The museum is built around Lund's collection of posters, playbills, books, photos, apparatus, scrapbooks, letters and thousands of other pieces of magic memorabilia and ephemera.
The first building, on Marshall's Michigan Avenue, opened to the public on April 1 -- April Fool's Day -- in 1978, a few years after the Lunds moved to Marshall from their former home near Detroit. A second building, the vacated former Marshall Public Library on Marshall's Mansion Street, was purchased in 1999 and is available for research and studies upon request.[1]
After Robert Lund died in 1995, Elaine Lund maintained the facility and supervised additions to the collection. Since Elaine Lund's passing in 2006, the museum has been governed by a board of directors and has become a non-profit corporation.
Books
- American Museum of Magic: It's True Story by Daniel Waldron (1991)
References
This page incorporated content from American Museum of Magic,
a page hosted on Wikipedia. Please consult the history of the original page to see a list of its authors. Therefor, this article is also available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License |
- ↑ Article Genii 1979 July