>> Developer on funk museum: ‘We’d love for them to find a way to be open’
“Our goal for this campaign is to raise the $50,000 match required to leverage a $100,000 state grant for capital improvements,” the appeal says. “That means every dollar you donate leverages $2 more. That’s a great return on your charitable investment. No gift is too large or too small.”
Last week, officials announced that the center would have to leave its home at 113 E. Third St. in downtown Dayton’s Fire Blocks District by the end of the month due to leasing cost financial shortfalls.
>> RELATED: Dayton funk museum closing, but director says ‘we are not finished’
The long-anticipated Funk Center opened at 113 E. Third St. in downtown Dayton’s Fire Blocks District in December 2017 and celebrated its grand opening early in 2018.
It has brought in about 6,000 funk fans from as far away as England, Japan and Germany.
A list of musicians that include members of the Steve Miller Band and George Thorogood and The Destroyers have visited the museum.
Funk legend George Clinton was there in July before a show at Hollywood Gaming Dayton Raceway with Parliament Funkadelic.
>> RELATED: What was George Clinton doing in downtown Dayton?
The museum began using the Third Street space free of charge under the Ellway Group, the Fire Blocks district’s first developer.
Funk Center CEO and founder David Webb said the volunteer-led organization could not afford to pay the $1,400 a month the new Fire Blocks developer Windsor Companies is requiring.
The funk music genre put Dayton on the map as the Land of the Funk in the 1970s and '80s, thanks to a stable of groups that included the Ohio Players, Steve Arrington's Hall of Fame, Zapp, Faze-O, Heatwave, Sun, Slave and Lakeside.
Credit: DaytonDailyNews
About the Author