
On December 18, the Orange County Historical Museum closedโand its three employees were laid offโwith no immediate plans to reopen.ย
Chartered in 1956, the small nonprofit museum, whichย and sits in a modest, two-story stone building on North Churton Street in Hillsborough, has long faced financial struggles and internal unrest.ย But executive director Stephanie Pryor nonetheless says she was โblindsidedโ by the decision from the board of directors.
The museum temporarily closed on November 30 following a water leak that led to extensive water and mold damage, jeopardizingย a permanent collection thatย includes artifacts dating back to the Civil War. While no date was set for the museum to reopen, Pryor says she believed it would happen next year. She was in the midst of writing grants and planning the event schedule when she found out that sheโd been let go.ย
The museum has been the subject of other recent controversies and difficulties. In 2015, the town voted to remove the words โConfederate Memorialโย from the front of the buildingโthe words were a carryover from the buildingโs previous use as a library, which had once received a donation from the Hillsborough United Daughters of the Confederacyโcausingย protests.
Then, in 2016, the ceiling collapsed, causing the museum to shutter for eighteen weeks.ย
And, according to Pryor, the museum received little support and was not financially transparentย during her time as executive director,ย though it had run a deficit for several years and did not pay a living wage. Pryor was paid a $29,990 salary for a thirty-hour work week,ย while part-time employees Anna Boyer and William Ragland made $12 and $10 an hour, respectively.ย
Much of the museumโs funding comes from the Hillsborough Tourism Boardโs trust fund, which is split between the Hillsborough Visitors Centerโwhich receives the bulk of the fundingโand local arts organizations, including the museum, the Hillsborough Arts Council, and the Burwell School Historic Site. (In October, the Burwell Schoolโs executive director was charged with felony embezzlement.)
Pryor also believes she was laid off asย retaliation for her complaints earlier this year about a former board memberโsย allegedly inappropriate remarks.ย
Sherry Appel, who chairs the museumโs board, says the closure and layoffs are only due to the water damage and the mold, which could put visitors, artifacts, and employees at risk. The board voted unanimously on the close.ย
โThis layoff has nothing to do with retaliation,โ Appel says. Like the other employees, she adds, Pryor will receive severance through January.ย
In a press release, the museum added: โThe Board regrets losing these valuable employees, but it determined that the nature of an indefinite closing period coupled with a change in organizational direction warranted this action.โ
Contact associate arts and culture editor Sarah Edwards at [email protected].ย
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Appel told a half truth. The employees were only given their severance if they signed a non-disclosure agreement. None of them did.