Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dedication pays tribute to fallen marshals

Museum lacking $15 million to open

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — The U.S. Marshals Museum still has a considerab­le journey ahead before it can be opened to the public.

Alice Alt, president of the U.S. Marshals Museum Foundation, said the foundation has about $15 million left to raise for the project’s capital campaign. Of that amount, $8 million will be used to start production on what is called the museum experience.

“The experience is what you’ll see inside of the museum when you come as a guest — the galleries, the innovative technology, the National Learning Center — so that’s really what we’re focused on,” Alt said.

The experience will be created by Thinkwell, a company in Los Angeles, Alt said.

One feature of the Marshals Museum that’s complete is the Samuel M. Sicard Hall of Honor paying tribute to 376 people who died while serving in the Marshals Service, said Patrick Weeks, president and chief executive officer of the museum.

The museum held a dedication Tuesday for both the Samuel M. Sicard Hall of Honor and the Mary Carleton and Robert A. Young III Building. Weeks said the day was also the 230th anniversar­y of the creation of the Marshals Service.

Among those who spoke

at Tuesday’s ceremony were Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Lt. Gov. Tim Griffin, Mayor George McGill and Donald Washington, Marshals Service director.

After constructi­on on the museum building is completed, Weeks said people will be able to visit both it and the hall of honor, but only by appointmen­t, until the museum has its grand opening.

Weeks said the museum, at 789 Riverfront Drive along the Arkansas River, will open about 15 months after the $8 million goal is reached. The museum will house five permanent galleries.

The names of these galleries are To Be A Marshal, The Campfire | Stories Under The Stars, Frontier Marshals, A Changing Nation and Modern Marshals.

Alt said the museum foundation is contacting a variety of parties, including private and public donors, corporatio­ns, initiative­s such as its GoFundMe campaign, vendors of the U.S. Marshals Service, and other foundation­s to get money for the project. On March 12, Fort Smith voters rejected a proposal to levy a nine-month 1% sales tax to pay for the completion of the museum.

Weeks said the museum has raised almost $34 million so far, with an in-kind land donation bringing the fundraisin­g total to about $37 million. Fort Smith was chosen as the location of the museum in 2007.

“After a national search to pick the home for the museum, Fort Smith was selected because of it being considered by the Marshals Service sacred ground because of how many marshals died riding out of Fort Smith in those frontier days and how many marshals are buried in this vicinity from that time period,” Weeks said.

“And also, this community got together and really sang from the rooftops, ‘Bring it home,’ and it’s home, right where it’s supposed to be.”

Weeks said constructi­on on the 53,000-square-foot building, which started July 16, 2018, will be completed in late November to mid-December. This is because of over 60 days of rain delays, with two and a half weeks also being lost due to a lack of access to the building site as a result of the Arkansas River flooding in May.

The building is over 80 percent complete.

“We’ve got the building standing, the windows are almost completely in with the permanent windows, most of the internal walls are built, electricit­y is run, but not necessaril­y terminated,” Weeks said. “We’re exactly where you’d be two months before, or three months before, you get it completely finished.”

What is left to do, Weeks said, includes floor and wall finishes and interior wall constructi­on, as well as some electrical, plumbing and roof work. The landscape also needs to be completed. The building, named the Mary Carleton and Robert A. Young III Building, was designed by the Arkansas-based firm Polk Stanley Wilcox Architects, with CDI Contractor­s serving as the contractor.

By the time the museum gets past some changes made during the constructi­on process, Weeks said the total amount spent on the building will be about $19.5 million — higher than an earlier price tag of $19.1 million. The changes include additions to upgrade certain systems and ground work.

“We ran into some issues with the parking lot areas where we had to what they call undercut more than expected, so there was some cost associated there,” Weeks said. “But it’ll end up sitting right around $19.5 million.”

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS SACCENTE ?? Donald Washington, director of the U.S. Marshals Service, speaks at Tuesday’s dedication of the Samuel M. Sicard Hall of Honor and the Mary Carleton and Robert A. Young III Building at the Marshals Museum in Fort Smith.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS SACCENTE Donald Washington, director of the U.S. Marshals Service, speaks at Tuesday’s dedication of the Samuel M. Sicard Hall of Honor and the Mary Carleton and Robert A. Young III Building at the Marshals Museum in Fort Smith.

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