The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Motown founder Berry Gordy donates $4M to museum expansion

- By Jeff Karoub

DETROIT >> Motown Records founder Berry Gordy Jr. is donating $4 million toward a project to expand a museum housed in the Detroit building where he built his music empire, officials announced Wednesday.

Gordy’s gift, which coincides with the company’s 60th anniversar­y, is the largest individual donation to the project officially announced in 2016, the Motown Museum said. It has attracted contributi­ons from individual­s, philanthro­pies and automotive companies, including Gordy’s long-ago employer Ford Motor Co. Gordy has long said the auto industry served as the inspiratio­n for what would become an assembly line of record-making.

“I’m excited about the future of Motown Museum and happy to support it,” Gordy said in a release. “Not only will the expanded museum entertain and tell the stories of talented and creative people who succeeded against all odds, but it will also inspire and create opportunit­y for people to explore their dreams the way I did mine. I couldn’t be prouder to be a part of that.”

Gordy launched Motown in 1959, moved the label to Los Angeles in 1972 and sold it in 1988. His late sister, Esther Gordy Edwards, founded the museum in the former “Hitsville U.S.A.” headquarte­rs on West Grand Boulevard in 1985. When Edwards died in 2011, Gordy — who has previously donated properties, artifacts and money to the museum — credited her with turning “the socalled trash left behind ... into a phenomenal worldclass monument at the spot where Hitsville started.”

Museum expansion plans include interactiv­e exhibits, a performanc­e theater, recording studios, an expanded retail area and meeting spaces. Museum officials say they are not releasing fundraisin­g totals.

Robin Terry, Motown Museum CEO and Gordy’s grand-niece, said in the release that his donation “advances our vision of making the expanded museum a world class entertainm­ent and educationa­l destinatio­n that will ensure the inspiratio­n of Motown lives on for generation­s to come.”

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