Selling the Past: How the 2008 Financial Crisis Forced Historic Preservationists to Choose What to Save
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After 2008, preservation nonprofits couldn’t afford the buildings they existed to protect. What happened when the organizations tasked with saving history had to sell history to survive?
Full Episode Description
In the years after the 2008 financial crash, a quiet fire sale swept across America. The sellers weren’t banks or speculators — they were historical societies, preservation trusts, and house museums. The items for sale were 18th-century mansions and landmark buildings.
The organizations tasked with protecting our cultural heritage were selling it off just to keep the lights on.
This episode examines how the Great Recession exposed a fatal flaw in the preservation model — asset rich, cash poor institutions holding expensive, illiquid real estate, dependent on endowments that lost 30-40% overnight, charitable giving that evaporated, and government grants that disappeared.
We trace the compounding disasters, look at the California Historical Society’s recent dissolution after 150 years of operation, and examine the painful shift away from the “buy it to save it” model toward co-stewardship, preservation easements, and adaptive reuse.
Topics Covered
- Why historic preservation organizations were uniquely vulnerable to the 2008 crash
- How endowment losses, collapsed giving, and vanishing grants hit simultaneously
- Deaccessioning entire buildings — and what preservation easements actually protect
- The California Historical Society’s dissolution and transfer to Stanford
- The National Trust for Historic Preservation’s shift to co-stewardship
- The debate between traditional preservationists and pragmatic administrators
- Why the “buy it to save it” model is largely considered dead
Tags / Keywords
historic preservation, 2008 financial crisis, preservation nonprofits, house museums, deaccessioning, preservation easements, California Historical Society, National Trust for Historic Preservation, adaptive reuse, nonprofit finance, cultural heritage, Postmodern Gypsy, Jordan Poole
Category
Primary: History | Secondary: Business