HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM •
Sunday, 2:00 - 5:00 PM, CLOSED Mondays, and six additional holidays: New Year's Day, Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor
Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
ADMISSION to
The Center: $3.00 adults • $2.50 seniors • $2.00 students • FREE to Members of The Center and
children under 6 years old. A group rate of $2.50 each, limited to groups of 20 or more applies with advance
reservations.
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Admission donations help support the operation and
cultural programming of The Center. An elevator, a permanent
ramp in the auditorium, and headsets for the hearing impaired make The Center more
accessible to the general public.
The Madison-Morgan Cultural Center is located in Madison's
1895 Romanesque Revival style public graded school building. Romanesque Revival reflects the popularity of the ancient and exotic style popular at
the end of the eighteenth century. Constructed of red brick with slate roof, electricity,
and interior finishes of heart pine and plaster, the building stands as a monument to the
creative ingenuity prevalent at the turn of the century.
Most rural areas built one-room
school houses well into the 20th century. However in 1895, Madison's first graded school
building was built to house Madison students, grades one through seven. The term
"graded school", molded into the terra cotta panel over the door of the
red-brick school house, refers to the progressive educational facility that offered the
citizens of Madison a separate classroom for each grade. The students were not mingled
into one or two rooms as they were in many of the outlying schools. The building was also
one of the first brick schools in the area. Later a separate building was built
for high
school students, grades eight through eleven and, even later, a lunch room building and
gymnasium were added to the property.
Built by the Board of Education of the City of Madison, the
building served as a public school until 1957, when the schools in the county consolidated
and outgrew the old facility. The old Graded School on South Main Street was abandoned.
The high school building and gym remained on the property. Concerned citizens petitioned
the School Board and city and county governments to protect the building and to insure the
protection and preservation of the elegant old structure. Even so, there was talk of
razing the building. Then in the early 1960's three civic minded men organized Morgan
County Foundation, Inc. with the avowed purpose of securing the building and making it
available to the public. Robert Turnell, Kay Tipton, and Joe Bell were the original
trustees and worked with an eight member Advisory Board to endow the foundation and to
decide upon a use. Public meetings, newspaper articles, and personal visits convinced many
that the Foundation was an idea whose time had come. At that time the public library was
housed in the upstairs of the gymnasium in a small and uncomfortable space. The Foundation
board offered the main building to the Library Board to use as its headquarters and the
library and staff subsequently moved in The building was shored in and the classrooms
remodeled for bookshelves.
Early in the 1970's, members of the Library Board decided that
the building was inadequate for their purposes and voted to construct a new building near
the public schools. This again raised the question of what use to put the building. Time
had taken its toll on the structure and major repairs were needed. The auditorium, in
particular, was in dire need of work; the roof was leaking and the school rooms were in
need of renovation.
With advice from Dr. Philip Weltner, then
Executive Director of the Woodruff Foundation and a longtime friend to Madison, and
others, the decision was made to work toward restoring the building's exterior and
adapting the interior for use as a Center for the performing, visual and decorative arts,
keeping in sight always the goal to retain as closely as possible the character of the
original building. At that time Madison's only large auditorium was at the high school and
the town did not have a museum or art gallery. The Madison-Morgan Cultural Center opened
its doors to the public for the first time on July 6, 1976
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