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Exhibit items stolen from museum

CAROLINE LOBSINGER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 8 months AGO
by CAROLINE LOBSINGER
I grew up in the Tri-Cities, Wash., and have always loved to write. I attended the University of Washington, where I earned a double major in journalism and political science, with an area of emphasis in history. I am the fifth out of six kids — don't believe any of the stories that my siblings tell. To be able to tell others stories and take photos for a living is a dream come true — and I considered myself blessed to be a community journalist. When I am not working, I enjoy spending time with family and friends, hiking and spending time outdoors, genealogy, reading, and watching the UW Huskies and the Seattle Seahawks. I am a servant to my cat, Frankie, who yes, will eat anything and everything in sight … even wedding cookies. | August 15, 2020 1:00 AM

SANDPOINT — A receipt and a few calendars from an old, long-gone laundry. An old ad encased in plexiglass and attached to the wall.

Those items, along with a USB drive filled with historic logging and forestry photos from the community’s early days that had been inserted into a monitor to provide a running display, are what the Bonner County History Museum know are missing and taken over the past few weeks.

“It’s a part of our history that somebody stole and that’s really sad,” museum board president Ruth Wimberly told the Daily Bee.

A police report has been filed.

Wimberly said the items first noticed as missing were the calendars, dating back to the 1920s and promoting a laundry run by Myrtle Davis, the mother of Sally Transue, who donated the items to the museum for the “Women of Bonner County” exhibit. At first they thought it was a prank, but soon noticed that an ad and a laundry receipt — both encased in plexiglass and attached to the wall — were missing as well. They began checking other exhibits and found a USB drive — containing historic photos of the timber and logging industries — had been taken out of a monitor that displayed the photos as part of the forestry exhibit.

“We don’t know what else [is gone],” Wimberly said. “We have a lot of stuff that just sits. I guess we’ve always been trusting and we never had a problem.”

Museum Executive Director Heather Upton said the thefts were a "gut punch" that left the museum staff feeling violated and represent a huge loss from a historical perspective.

The ad promoting Millie LaFond's shop was one of two items the museum had related to the early day milliner. That story "is less complete now," she said.

While items are irreplacable from a history standpoint, they aren’t valuable in terms of their monetary cost, Upton and Wimberly said. That’s why museum staff is wondering if it was part of a prank or a joke, where someone had taken the items to give to somebody else as part of an inside joke.

“A lot of the stuff that was taken isn’t valuable but it’s priceless and it tells our history and that’s what makes us so sad that somebody would come in and do this,” she said.

“Really, you’re going to steal from a museum?”

As best as the museum staff can tell, the items have gone missing over the last couple of weeks, museum staff said. The museum also is in the process of doing a complete inventory of exhibits and items that were on display to determine what else, if anything, might have been taken.

The museum plans to close the week of Aug. 24 to reconfigure exhibits, secure artifacts, install more security cameras and recruit more volunteers to act as docents. They also are exploring the use of copies, instead of original documents, where possible “becasue we can’t trust that they’ll still be there,” Wimberly said.

The museum will be available for research requests and for people to drop off items for its yard sale on Sept. 12.

Wimberly said museum staff and volunteers were saddened by the thefts, by the loss of the community’s history by someone they fear will only dump the items. Their hope, instead?

“Call the museum,” Wimberly said. “We’d take them back, no questions asked. We’re hoping that somebody will have a guilty conscience and return them.”

If anyone has any information, they can contact the museum, no questions asked, at 208-263-2344.

Caroline Lobsinger can be reached at clobsinger@bonnercountydailybee.com and follow her on Twitter @CarolDailyBee.

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