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1310633 tn?1430224091

Time running out for African-American collection

(CNN) -- The priceless, 8,000-piece collection of rare African-American memorabilia Nathaniel Montague spent decades collecting could be dismantled if a buyer doesn't come forward by mid-July.

During a status hearing in bankruptcy court scheduled for July 20 in Las Vegas, creditor ABKCO Music & Records plans to ask the court to conduct an auction of the items in the Montague Collection, which includes slave and indentured servitude documents, a signed copy of Phillis Wheatley's "Poems on Various Subjects" dated 1773, and a handwritten letter from Booker T. Washington seeking financial assistance for 221 students at Tuskegee.

"There's nothing I can do," Montague said. "I wish there were, but there isn't. I just hope that we don't turn out to be losers, and that I get something for my efforts."

Montague, a onetime radio personality who coined the phrase "Burn, Baby, Burn," spent 50 years acquiring rare and one-of-a-kind pieces of American history, including books, photographs, paintings and ephemera. An assessment of five of the pieces puts their total value somewhere between $592,000 and $940,000. His goal was to turn it into a museum. Now that it is out of his possession, he just wants to see his life's work remain intact.

Years ago Montague and his wife of 56 years, Rose Casalan, began taking out loans to archive and prepare the collection for sale. They found themselves overextended financially and declared bankruptcy last year. The collection was seized and is now housed under tight security in Las Vegas. It is in the hands of a trusteeship charged with selling it to satisfy the debts, including a judgment for $325,000 plus fees from New York-based ABKCO, an independent entertainment company that owns rights to recordings by Sam Cooke, The Rolling Stones and Bobby Womack.

Fees have continued to mount, including $250,000 from a financing company to pay for housing and marketing the collection, said Jason Wiley, an attorney for ABKCO.

ABKCO had agreed to give the trusteeship six months to market the collection. Time has run out, and there have been no buyers. Now, the company plans to petition the court to conduct an auction of the collection during the July 20 hearing.

"We haven't come close to getting this thing sold," Wiley said. "We've got to cut this thing off."

Dotan Melech, the federal bankruptcy trustee charged with administering the Montague estate, is still hopeful he can find a buyer or get more time from the court. He has sent letters to a few hundred individuals and nonprofits that have shown interest in the collection asking them to submit their best bid by July 13.

He is trying to come up with other solutions, as well, including setting up Twitter and Facebook accounts to help get the word out. He's also considered a Kickstarter campaign.

"In this economy, no one throws money at anything," Melech said. "We're trying as hard as we can."
If the judge grants ABKCO's request, the collection could be sold piecemeal until the debt is satisfied. Any remaining items could be returned to Montague.

That will break his heart, Melech said.

"If you have five children and two are taken away, it doesn't hurt less because you got three back," he said.
Montague says he will think positively until a deal is made.

"I only want to look ahead, that it can be done," he said. "Every day I think of what I can do until time runs out."

SOURCE: http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/02/us/montague-collection-auction/index.html?hpt=us_c2
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1310633 tn?1430224091
If all of the below universities got together, they could purchase this collection, no sweat...

Bluefield State College
West Virginia State University
Kentucky State University
Delaware State University
Lincoln University (Pennsylvania)
University of the District of Columbia
Elizabeth City State University
Fayetteville State University
Winston Salem State University
Xavier University of Louisiana

I just yanked that list off Wiki (HBCU's).

$100K each, and they could purchase the collection and keep it intact. If they offered the creditors $1M, I bet they could get it lock, stock & barrel.

Might follow this story, offline, and see what happens.

Sh*t, if I had the money, I'd buy it myself.
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Avatar universal
Yeah, once you dismantle a collection like this, it's never the same.  Private investors take a liking in one piece or another and purchase it.  Another investor purchases another piece....

It is a travesty.
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1310633 tn?1430224091
This is sad.

I wonder why one of the larger universities doesn't step forward and purchase the collection?

Selling it off piecemeal would be a travesty.

Seems to me that the collection is as much a part of American history as a lot of other stuff I've seen.

Curious that the MLK Cultural Foundation or the NAACP or something like that, hasn't come forward with an offer to save it.

From what the article says, it's not going to take much $$$ to pay off the creditors...

Shame.
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