"To get anyone
to come to your museum, it has to be
different than anybody else's," Bird
said. "I decided this is something
that is neglected and should no
longer be neglected."
So he formed a nonprofit
organization and now raises money, a
little bit at a time.
He heard about the vacant
schoolhouse, just off Route 7, from
his state representative. It closed
its doors in the 1960s, but was used
as a daycare center until shortly
before Bird moved in almost two
years ago.
Bird, who is single, used the
profits from the sale of his house
and then his credit card to put on a
new roof and pay for electrical,
plumbing and heating work. Much
remains to be done.
The building is handicapped
accessible, but it doesn't have a
handicapped accessible rest room and
he can't afford the $5,000 cost, so
he can't bring in bus tours, as he'd
like.
Bird said that as he collected more
information and exhibits about the
service of black service members
he'd replace the generic exhibits.
He estimates his budget this year is
about $10,000.
"The day I retired, I decided I will
no longer worry. That's what I'm
working on. Someday between now and
when the fuel bill comes due, the
money will come in."
He's started fundraising, but no
matter. He's committed to the museum
for life.
"I am having a hell of a good time.
I never made appreciable amounts of
money. I never married. What am I
going to do for the rest of my
life?" he said.
"Eventually, I will leave enough
money so they can hire someone,"
Bird said. "The first plan is to
live a long time because it will
take a long time."
But things that help him out appear,
apparently, out of nowhere.
He first heard of Raven Crone, when
the 64-year-old Charlestown, N.H.,
woman called him. She'd seen a
newspaper story about Bird's museum.
She now maintains the museum's Web
site, at least partly to honor her
father's legacy.
"I never met my father. He died when
I was 2," said Crone, who put a
short story about him on the Web
site.
Earlier this year, Bird received a
call from someone he didn't know,
inviting him to a Congressional Gold
Medal presentation ceremony in
Washington honoring the Tuskegee
Airmen.
"You can never tell any day when you
open your mail what's going to
happen," he said.
____
On the Web:
The Museum of Black World War II
History:
http://www.blackww2museum.org/