EIN 54-1857973

Museum of the Shenandoah Valley (MSV)

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
63
Year formed
1997
Most recent tax filings
2022-06-01
NTEE code, primary
Description
The Museum of the Shenandoah Valley (MSV) is dedicated to preserving and enriching the cultural life and heritage of the Valley. The Museum sits on land originally claimed by Winchester founder James Wood in 1735.
Also known as...
The Glass-Glen Burnie Museum
Total revenues
$7,078,309
2022
Total expenses
$6,611,822
2022
Total assets
$37,985,540
2022
Num. employees
63
2022

Program areas at MSV

Educational, community and public programs The msv utilizes its entire campus for educational and public programming including garden spaces, galleries, classrooms, a makerspace studio, and The trails at The msv. Rose hill park also provides space for educational and public programs.in fy 2022, The msv offered 369 educational and community programs that served 20,023 people of all ages. The msv offered 336 youth, family, and adult educational programs attended by 8,407 people. For youth, new and expanded programs included junior naturalists camps and a juried teen art show. For adults, 106 msv programs served 1,441 people. Many programs incorporated The trails at The msv and included jr. trailblazers, full moon night hikes, yoga on The trails, and various guided trail walks. Continuing adult programs included virtual talks, gallery talks, pottery workshops in The makerspace studio, guided garden talks, curator-led talks, and a variety of hands-on workshops. Msv school programming engaged 4,200 students of all ages. The msv provided rent-free use of campus property to a local preservation group and a regional arts council. Thanks to corporate underwriting, 16,220 people - exclusive of msv members - received free general admission to The msv galleries and gardens. The Museum serves Valley artists through a consignment program in its Museum store and offers specialty items and books complementing msv exhibitions, and educational programs.
Our exhibitions The msv contains four gallery spaces housed on The second level of The main Museum building. In The Shenandoah Valley gallery, objects, multi-media presentations, and exhibits explore The sweep of Valley history, and two additional rooms display changing exhibitions highlighting The Valley's decorative arts and works by contemporary Valley artists. The founders gallery presents rotating exhibitions featuring objects from The collection of european and american fine and decorative arts assembled by msv benefactor julian wood glass jr. The r. lee taylor miniatures gallery is home to a fascinating collection of furnished houses and rooms assembled by r. lee taylor, glass's partner and The Museum's late curator of gardens. The miniatures gallery also presents shadowboxes created by Valley miniatures artist william p. massey (active 1930s to 1940s).the changing exhibitions gallery, founders gallery, and Shenandoah Valley gallery display continually changing exhibitions throughout The year. In addition, an exhibition is presented annually in The drawing room of The msv glen Burnie house. The msv organizes changing exhibitions and brings traveling exhibitions to The region with The goal of serving diverse audiences. In fy 2022, The msv presented 9 separate exhibitions: norman rockwell's america (february 20 - august 8, 2021); rock, paper, scissors: works by new image artists (november 21, 2020 - december 6, 2021); national geographic photo ark (september 25, 2021 - february 13, 2022); and danny lyon: memories of The southern civil rights movement (april 1 - july 31, 2022). Two outdoor exhibitions were presented in The gardens: The invitational outdoor sculpture show (may 1 - october 31, 2021) and origami in The garden (may 28 - november 13, 2022).along with these major rotating exhibitions, The msv continued The display of its collection of twentieth and twenty-first century art in The vital force exhibition (closed september 12, 2022) and The display of Shenandoah Valley decorative arts in The collect, preserve, interpret exhibition. On january 15, 2022, The msv also opened The exhibition contributions: african americans in The Shenandoah Valley, drawn from its collection. Near The end of The fiscal year, on june 25, 2022, The msv opened The digital exhibition wild, wonderful, and brave: fighting The pandemic in The eastern panhandle. In addition, The work of numerous contemporary Valley artists was displayed through four art in The halls installations in fy 2022, and selections from The julian wood glass jr. collection featuring 12 paintings collected by msv benefactor julian wood glass jr.was on view in The glen Burnie house drawing room from april 1 through may 16, 2022; this was followed by an indoor display related to origami in The garden.
Our collection The Museum of The Shenandoah Valley cares for a permanent collection containing more than 23,000 objects, including The fine and decorative art collected by msv benefactor julian wood glass jr., The miniature houses and rooms assembled in The Valley by glass's partner r. lee taylor, and a collection of objects and artifacts that tell The story of The Shenandoah Valley. Located on a 214-acre landscape that is The largest green space and only working farm in The city of winchester, The msv is a regional cultural center that includes galleries, The glen Burnie house, seven acres of formal gardens, and The trails at The msva 90-acre art park on The msv landscape.the glen Burnie house, The oldest portions of which date to 1794, is surrounded by seven acres of formal gardens which were installed in The latter half of The twentieth century by msv benefactor julian wood glass jr. and his partner r. lee taylor. The Museum sits on land originally claimed by glass's ancestor and winchester founder james wood in 1735. The property was passed through generations of wood and glass families until being acquired in 1952 by julian wood glass jr. Following The death of his father. Beginning in The 1950s, The property was extensively renovated and transformed into a country retreat. The home was furnished with objects passed through family generations along with eighteenth- and nineteenth-century furniture and fine arts acquired by julian wood glass jr. The msv is supported by The Glass-Glen Burnie foundation and manages The property in accordance with a written cooperative agreement with The foundation. Upon mr. glass's death and as a condition of his will, The house and gardens were opened to The public on a seasonal basis in 1997. In 2005, The Museum of The Shenandoah Valley (msv), a 50,000-square-foot galleries building, was added as an anchor to The site to fulfill glass's vision of sharing his significant collection with The public and to expand upon that vision to include a space where The art, history, and culture of The Valley could be interpreted. Following a two-year renovation project, The glen Burnie house reopened in fy 2014 as a versatile space for educational and cultural programming featuring new displays and interpretation. The glen Burnie house and adjacent gardens are among The msv's most important collection assets. In 2014, The msv unveiled a larger land use plan, The master plan, which outlined The future development of The msv landscape.in fy 2021, The trails at The msv opened. A free-admission art park on 90 acres of The msv landscape, The trails at The msv offers more than 3 miles of trails for walking, running, and bicycling. The trails include landscape features such as a standing stone circle and floating wetlands boardwalk and outdoor art installations. In accordance with The msv collections management policy and since opening in 2005, The Museum actively collects items of significance to The Shenandoah Valley. The msv funds acquisition and conservation efforts with its collections and exhibitions endowment and a recently formed gaunt collectors society. The msv building includes a collections storage space for items not on display. In addition to The msv campus, The msv manages The ancestral home of The glass family, known as The rose hill farm. The site includes a vernacular federal-style house and is notable for being The location of The civil war's first battle of kernstown. A renovation project to stabilize and preserve The home was completed in fy 2015 and The house is rented to The msv executive director who oversees its maintenance and care. In fy 2017, thanks to a partnership with The frederick county parks and recreation department, The historic portions of The rose hill landscape adjacent to The house opened to The public as a community park featuring a 1.3-mile walking trail with interpretive signage, a parking lot, restrooms, and open play fields. The rose hill park is co-managed by lease to frederick county.

Who funds Museum of the Shenandoah Valley (MSV)

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
The Glass-Glen Burnie FoundationTo Support the Museum's Monthly Operations$3,432,838
Rhea Lindstrom-Engel Charitable Trust DTD 6-17-20Advance the Mission of the Charitable Organization$80,000
Community Foundation of Harrisonburg and Rockingham County (TCF)Historical Preservation$35,000
...and 13 more grants received

Personnel at MSV

NameTitleCompensation
Dana Hand EvansChief Executive Officer and Director$162,481
Tamara B CooperDirector of Finance$85,352
Sherry HudsonSenior Director , Institutional Advancement$101,103
Laura WileyDirector of Community Engagement$104,433
Wilborn M RobersonPresident$0
...and 7 more key personnel

Financials for MSV

RevenuesFYE 06/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$5,300,647
Program services$457,792
Investment income and dividends$88,018
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$87,741
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$223,708
Net income from fundraising events$0
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$920,403
Total revenues$7,078,309

Form 990s for MSV

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2022-062023-02-17990View PDF
2021-062022-03-18990View PDF
2020-062021-04-05990View PDF
2019-062020-01-21990View PDF
2018-062019-04-15990View PDF
...and 8 more Form 990s

Organizations like MSV

OrganizationLocationRevenue
The Farmers MuseumNew York, NY$4,849,865
Museum of Northern Arizona (MNA)Flagstaff, AZ$7,019,493
Bartow History MuseumCartersville, GA$10,822,598
Reading Public Museum (RPM)Reading, PA$4,253,898
Holocaust Museum HoustonHouston, TX$7,348,837
Taft Museum of ArtCincinnati, OH$9,758,703
Tampa Bay History Center (TBHC)Tampa, FL$3,118,785
Vizcaya Museum and Gardens TrustMiami, FL$11,588,414
The History MuseumSouth Bend, IN$1,875,609
Columbia River Maritime Museum (CRMM)Astoria, OR$10,271,351
Data update history
June 23, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2021
June 19, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
June 16, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 4 new personnel
June 12, 2023
Used new vendors
Identified 2 new vendors, including , and
May 10, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 6 new personnel
Nonprofit Types
Arts, culture, and humanities nonprofitsMuseumsHeadquarter / parent organizationsCharities
Issues
Arts, cultural, and humanities
Characteristics
State / local levelReceives government fundingEndowed supportTax deductible donations
General information
Address
901 Amherst St
Winchester, VA 22601
Metro area
Winchester, VA-WV
County
Winchester city, VA
Website URL
themsv.org/ 
Phone
(540) 662-1473
Facebook page
The.MSV 
Twitter profile
@visitmsv 
IRS details
EIN
54-1857973
Fiscal year end
June
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1997
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
A54: History Museums
NAICS code, primary
7121: Museums, Historical Sites, and Similar Institutions
Parent/child status
Central organization
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