To get to her new office at Hennepin History Museum, Cedar Imboden Phillips walks a crowded hallway of history.
The museum's new director passes the shell of a Soapbox Derby racer, a huge bellows, a display board of ornamental doorknobs, a stuffed lion from a long-ago Minneapolis zoo, then takes a right at the 1954 Coke bottle dispenser.
The squeeze illustrates both some of the museum's issues and its possibilities as Phillips, 36, takes over.
It's a job the Minneapolis native waited for patiently as she honed her museum-building skills at other museums around the nation. She started at the Hennepin museum as a volunteer in her teens, and even got married there, paying guests' admission.
"I believe this place has incredible potential," Phillips said last week. "I think all of the building blocks are here."
But the museum has a long way to go to reach that potential. It expects to record only 2,500 visitors this year, a figure that Phillips hopes to double in 2015. The museum's budget of $288,000 next year pales beside those of at least half-dozen county historical societies outside the Twin Cities based in cities much smaller than Minneapolis. Closer to home, the Ramsey County Historical Society, which operates the Gibbs Museum farmhouse, reported income of more than $800,000 in 2013.
"Cedar's charge is to build this thing from a hidden gem to a not-so-hidden gem," said board President Cara Letofsky, who joined the board in early 2013 with extensive political and nonprofit development experience. She and Phillips aim to transform an organization that has struggled to gain traction in a crowded Twin Cities museum market.
One issue is space, illustrated by the clutter outside her office. The museum sits a half-block north of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts in the Christian family mansion, home of its collection since 1958. The big brick house wasn't built for a museum collection of more than 10,000 objects and more than 100,000 documents. Back rooms that housed servants are stuffed with files of photos and documents; hatboxes and racks of vintage clothing fill other spaces.