On the front page of the Local & State section of today's Charlotte paper is a big story, complete with color pictures telling of a $6.5 Million Repository of Music & Cultural History getting ready to go online in Shelby.
My immediate question after reading the story is wheter there is an opportunity for the Historic Cleveland County Speedway in Shelby to partner in the "Cultural" portion of this well-funded endeavor to gain some additional recognition?
The project aims to boost tourism for Shelby & Cleveland County, NC. One of the stated objectives of the new center, launched by the non-profit Destination Cleveland County to lure tourists to the economically depressed county, is to "focus on education and stories that explain the area's cultural history." I think all of us on this site would accept the premise that the story of auto racing in Shelby and Cleveland County, NC is an important part of the cultural fabric of the region and deserves appropriate recognition.
With the VCS getting ready to come about it seems to me that some sort of joint alliance with this multi-million dollar deal could boost our profile. In the least, a nice letter from Jeff & "W" along with appropriate news releases to the writer of this article in the Charlotte paper could point out that there is another big deal getting ready to happen in Shelby. Just a thought. Here's the story as it appears in today's Charlotte paper with original headline & photos.
In Shelby, the sweet sound of progress
Repository of music and cultural history edges to completion
By Joe DePriest
jdepriest@charlotteobserver.com
Posted: Monday, Jan. 30, 2012
SHELBY - From the outside, the 105-year-old former Cleveland County Courthouse in downtown Shelby looks pretty much as it always has.
But within its walls, a major makeover is going on. If things go well, by year's end, the local landmark will become the Earl Scruggs Center: Music & Stories of the American South, a regional music education and performance center.
Restoration work that began in the spring of 2010 is almost finished; the next phase is creating interpretive exhibits.
Named for Cleveland County native Earl Scruggs, five-string banjo virtuoso and bluegrass music pioneer, the center will showcase all kinds of regional music, from gospel to jazz. It will also focus on education and stories that explain the area's cultural history.
Planning for the $6.5 million project began in 2006, and it was launched two years later by the nonprofit Destination Cleveland County as a way to lure tourists to an economically depressed county.
That same year, Destination Cleveland County opened the Don Gibson Theatre a few blocks away, in the renovated 1939 art deco State Theater. The 400-seat performing arts venue is named after Gibson, another local music legend. Now in its third season, the theater continues to book nationally known performers such as Grammy winners Shelby Lynne and Richard Marx.
Things have moved more slowly for the Scruggs center.
"We announced the fundraising campaign in 2008 - a few weeks before the bottom fell out of the economy," said project chairman J.T. Scruggs, a nephew of Earl Scruggs. "We've still got some money to raise, but with the times, we've been pretty successful."
The center has received county and federal grants along with donations from businesses and individuals.
Vision guides project
Earl Scruggs, who grew up in the Flint Hill section of rural Cleveland County and now lives in Nashville, has given his blessing to the project. He and his sons, Gary and Randy, have made several local personal appearances in support of the center.
On Jan. 6, Scruggs turned 88 and was the subject of a profile in the Jan. 17 issue of the New Yorker magazine. Entitled "The Master from Flint Hill," the piece was written by Scruggs' friend, entertainer Steve Martin.
"Some nights, he had the stars of North Carolina shooting from his fingertips," the article begins. "Before him, no one had ever played the banjo like he did. After him, everybody played banjo like he did, or at least tried.
"...A grand part of American music owes a debt to Earl Scruggs. Few players have changed the way we hear an instrument the way Earl has, putting him in a category with Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong, Chet Atkins, and Jimi Hendrix."
J.T. Scruggs, along with other members of Destination Cleveland County, met Martin last year after his concert in Charlotte.
"He's a neat guy," Scruggs said. "We told him he has a standing invitation to the grand opening of the Scruggs center. He said he'd be there if his schedule permitted."
Brownie Plaster, chairperson of Destination Cleveland County, said the vision of Earl Scruggs is helping guide the project.
Against the advice of his mother, Scruggs left his third-shift job at a Shelby textile mill in 1945 and headed to Knoxville, Tenn., to give a shot at a music career. He first tasted fame playing with bluegrass pioneer Bill Monroe's band and went on to even greater fame with Lester Flatt.
In the late 1960s, Scruggs turned in a new musical direction, growing his hair long and joining his sons, Randy and Gary, to form the country/rock Earl Scruggs Review.
In Shelby, visitors to the center will see footage of Scruggs talking about his musical journey.
"In it, he says 'If there's a bright light shining out there, I want to go toward it,' '' Plaster said. "He also said 'You can't encore the past.' We want to take his vision of reinventing himself and help Cleveland County come out stronger than before."
The Scruggs Center will make use of 100 oral histories collected from people around the region. Snippets from these voices will be heard at several points on the first floor; on the second floor education center, computers will be available so people can listen to complete interviews. Also on the second floor will be a gallery with rotating exhibit space and a meeting room in the former courtroom.
Plaster called the renovated building "a jewel box. ... It'll glisten."
Telling 'the whole story'
Elementary school principal Tropzie McCluney got involved with Destination Cleveland County as a board member because she wanted to make sure the African-American side of the story was included. She remembers when blacks couldn't set foot on the first floor of the courthouse and "colored" restrooms were in the basement. Stores around the court square were off limits to blacks.
"All children don't know the story," McCluney said. "They just see the town. They don't know the whole story."
She thinks diversity and change will keep the project from getting stagnant.
"We want a center that will keep people coming," McCluney said. "We want them to say, 'Hey, they've got something new there. Let's go back.' "
DePriest: 704-868-7745
Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/01/30/2970440/in-shelby-the-sweet-sound-of-progress.html#storylink=misearch#storylink=cpy
--
"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"
updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:02:07PM