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From Hearth To Heritage
Southern Hospitality
Jan Alexander
10/01/2005

Other plantation owners in the area have tried opening their estates to visitors and found it either too invasive or too unstable as a business venture. But owners of historic homes who are interested in such a proposition, whether out of public spirit or entrepreneurship, can seek to emulate a number of viable role models: the Piatt Castles in Ohio, the Biltmore Estate in North Carolina and Boone Hall Plantation in South Carolina.

According to Max van Balgooy, director of interpretation and education for the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington, historical home museums are probably the most popular type of museum in the United States. He estimates that there are 10,000 to 15,000 such preserved homes across the country, although most are publicly funded. The trust receives frequent calls from those seeking advice on turning historic houses into public spaces, and it can offer creative suggestions. “You can make the grounds available just for weddings, music festivals or school groups,” van Balgooy says, “or go the wholly commercial route. Donald Trump bought the Mira Lago estate and turned it into a private club.”

Other considerations include:
Location
“Instead of saying, ‘We have this house, let’s do tours,’ first find where the market is,” Carter says. The plantation area benefits from the proximity of colonial Williamsburg, which is just 35 miles from Shirley Plantation.
 
Foundation Or For-Profit
Turning the estate into a nonprofit museum with an endowment from a foundation makes it possible to solicit donations and run the operation tax-free. However, owners must cede much of the control to the board of directors. A family business, on the other hand, must be run by someone willing to be a decisive chief executive.

“Why my family hasn’t hung me over a tree, I don’t know sometimes,” Carter says. His sister, Harriet Pittman, kept sheep and collies at the farm. “I realized this is not really our focus,” Carter says. “I don’t see a lot of revenues from the animals, so they’re gone.”

Tourism, on the other hand, does produce modest revenue. “Our business probably peaked in the late 1990s at more than 50,000 visitors a year,” Carter says. Visits dropped after 9/11, and he estimates there will be about 45,000 guests this year, at about $10 a head, though Southern decorum makes Carter loath to discuss revenues. “I think,” he says, “it’s because after the Civil War so many folks lost so much, it just wasn’t proper . . . .”

Invest In History
The plantation showed a healthy profit through much of the 1980s and early 1990s, but a capital improvement program that includes the archaeological digging ended this run. However, Carter expects his  efforts to unearth history to yield returns in the future—not only from the tourist trade, but also in terms of keeping future generations intrigued in a family business that is so inextricable from the family history.

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