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July 12, 2021

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V O L . X X V I I N O. X I V J U LY 1 2 , 2 0 2 1 20 A U G U S TA / WAT E R V I L L E / C E N T R A L M A I N E Ganneston Construction, of Augusta, the general contractor on the addition, has been providing pro bono consulting. e team has taken shape, too. Cotz became executive director in January 2020. e museum hired an exhibit designer and project manager, Helen Riegle of HER Design in Boston. She's done work for the Smithsonian and the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Amanda Austin, of 2A Architects, of Rockport, leads the expansion design. Old building challenges Prior to joining the museum, Cotz held senior leadership positions at Montpelier, the historic Virginia estate of James and Dolley Madison, which underwent a major restoration during his tenure. So it's not his first crack at bringing an old building up to modern standards. ere's also the fact that Madison, America's fourth president, was consid- ered the "father of the Constitution." "ere are a lot of parallels between the two places," says Cotz, who spent two decades at Montpelier. e Augusta museum's stucco- exterior Mediterranean Revival-style building long called the Gannett House was considered a modern marvel when it was built in 1911, with electricity, a central vacuum system and the city's first car garage. As Cotz and Gannett talk in what was once her grandparents' sitting room, the lack of air-conditioning on a warm day underlines the challenges. "It's a big house, but there are no big spaces that you need for a museum," Cotz says. In the past five years, the building has undergone extensive interior and exterior work, including new windows and roof. It still needs new bathrooms, handicap accessibility, an elevator, an HVAC system. While preliminary work on the addition gets going, the house will be further restored. Eventually it will have exhibits on how the First Amendment looks at home, with a library featuring books that have faced censorship. A teen room will help visitors "navigate the murky world of free expression on the internet," including a multime- dia interactive game that challenges visitors to spot moments when public discourse becomes uncivil. e museum is working with the Maine Preservation Commission and the Capitol Planning Commission, which oversees the master plan for the state government campus, a stipula- tion when the nonprofit that owns it bought the building from the state. For the public good When William Gannett built the house as a wedding gift for his son, Guy, the proximity to the heart of state govern- ment was intentional. "He wanted it to be close to the capitol, to the governor," Gannett, who is Guy Gannett's granddaughter, says. e publishing family founded some of the country's biggest maga- zines in the late 19th century, owned several Maine newspapers, and even- tually TV and radio stations. Guy Gannett didn't see the newspapers as a private enterprise. "He felt what they were doing was for the public good," she says. Cotz says the location will still be a key piece. "We're within an hour of 100,000 school children," he says. e combination of Maine State Museum and Archives, on the other side of the Statehouse, as well as the capitol building itself, make an excit- ing one-two-three punch. Cotz envi- sions field trips in which students visit the state museum, then visit the State House, then move on to the First Amendment Museum, to learn what part they play in it all. For now, visitors can tour it for free, and check out panels that show what's coming. Cotz and Gannett say they realize that the $14 million price tag seems high — but also note it's the same goal the Children's Museum & eatre of Maine set for its new building, which opened June 24. e cause is vital, Gannett says. "As a country, we need to pay atten- tion to the First Amendment and what it means. [e museum] plays an important role." Cotz says museums that are truly embracing their purpose understand their place in history. "Any museum that opens now has to take the last few years into account," he says. at is true, in particular, for the one they are building in Augusta. Cotz says understanding democ- racy means understanding the First Amendment. "It's the way we change our government, it's the way we change our society, it's the way we change our world," he says. "If the goal is 'to form a more perfect union,' we have to commit, not only to talking about what the First Amendment is, but how it affects how we think, govern — how it's put into action." Cotz knows that's a big calling for a museum in Augusta, Maine. "But we can do it. We're here to do it." Maureen Milliken, Mainebiz senior writer, can be reached at mmilliken @ mainebiz.biz P H O T O / C O U R T E S Y O F T H E F I R S T A M E N D M E N T M U S E U M Fulfilling a legacy W illiam Gannett, whose Comfort Magazine, published in Augusta in the late 1800s, was the first magazine to reach 1 million subscribers, built the house that is home to the First Amendment Museum for his son, Guy, as a wedding gift in 2011. Guy, in 1921, bought Portland's two daily newspapers (now the Press Herald), as well as the Kennebec Journal and Waterville Sentinel. He sold the house in 1927, moving to Cape Elizabeth. Genie Gannett, Guy's granddaughter, says the museum fulfills a wish from her mother, who lived in the house as a child. When Genie herself was a child, they lived in Augusta. "Every time we'd drive by, my mother would say, 'Oh, I wish they'd do something with the house.'" Gannett and her sister, Terry Hopkins, began the process of buying it from the state in 2010 through a nonprofit funded by their mother. They at first planned to make it a museum that recounted the Gannett publishing and journalism history. "But we saw it had to be more," she says. The idea evolved into a museum that championed newspapers and the free press, then the First Amendment as a whole. "It's a package deal," she says. More than a century after her great-grandfather built the house, intentionally close to state government in order to "keep an eye on it," she says, "I feel in a lot of ways we're fulfilling a legacy." The Gannett family, in the living room of what's now the First Amendment Museum, in 1922. From left, Guy P. Gannett, daughter Alice Madeleine, son John, wife Anne Macomber Gannett. » C O N T I N U E D F RO M P R E V I O U S PA G E R E N D E R I N G / C O U R T E S Y O F 2 A A R C H I T E C T S F O C U S A rendering of the design for the completed First Amendment Museum in Augusta. An addition will double its size.

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