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Ivor Massey Jr.’s passions
include historic sites and new technology
by Robert Powell
Virginia Business
June 2005
Anyone who associates the Association
for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities with white-gloved
society ladies has not met Ivor Massey Jr. The bearded,
6-foot, 3-inch president of the APVA looks like a man
who might ride a Harley. He does, in fact, and used
to own a Harley-Davidson motorcycle dealership as well
— one of many business interests.
Massey, a resident of Richmond’s
Fan District, has practiced law, managed his family’s
investments and played a major role in a venture capital
fund that promoted high-tech businesses. But the APVA
is his cause. He wants to transform not only the venerable
historic preservation group but also the public’s
perception of historic sites. “We’re trying
to change the culture to the point where people value
historic resources rather than see them as something
standing in the way of progress,” he says.
Continuing an initiative begun by
the late Martin King, his predecessor as APVA president,
Massey is trying to reposition the organization from
just being the owner of historic sites such as the
John
Marshall House and Historic Jamestown to being a high-profile
advocate for historic preservation. Massey encourages
nonprofit groups to pool their resources so they can
effectively lobby the legislature, raise money and
market
ideas. Preservationists, he notes, are competing for
people’s attention “along with companies
selling automobiles and soap.”
Bob Bluford, a Presbyterian minister
who is president of the APVA’s Douglas Southall
Freeman branch, praises Massey’s leadership. “He
has been a great advocate for things that are very important
to the community. He’s also a dependable friend,”
he says.
Under Massey’s guidance, the
APVA joined a protest last winter against plans by the
state government to level two former Richmond hotels
used for years as office buildings. Demolition has been
stayed while a feasibility study funded by several groups,
including the APVA, is conducted on use of the buildings.
A previous state study was “not as open-minded
as it could have been,” Massey says with a wry
smile.
Rather than protests, the APVA is
best known today for the Jamestown Rediscovery Project,
an archaeological program begun in 1994 that has captured
headlines around the world. At Historic Jamestown, which
the APVA co-administers with the National Park Service,
Dr. William Kelso, the APVA’s director of archaeology,
has discovered the remains of the settlement’s
original fort and uncovered some 300,000 artifacts.
One of the most dramatic recent discoveries
has been the grave of a man that Kelso believes is Bartholomew
Gosnold, one of Jamestown’s founders who died
only months after his arrival. This month the remains
of one of Gosnold’s relatives will be exhumed
on England to extract genetic material. Kelso hopes
to use the DNA to identify the Jamestown skeleton as
Gosnold’s.
Massey wants to use state-of-the-art
technology to offer Kelso’s findings to the public.
He envisions a comprehensive Web-based resource center
that would provide access to every imaginable piece
of information about Jamestown. His model is “The
Valley of Shadow,” a digital archive tracing the
history of two places, Augusta County, Va., and Franklin
County, Pa., through the Civil War.
Massey, 57, is well acquainted with
the marvels and the perils of technology. He was a major
investor in Monument Capital Partners, a $25 million
venture capital fund begun in 2000 to jump-start a number
of Richmond high-tech companies. The fund was phased
out in 2003 after many of the companies failed. “Monument
started at the height of the technology bubble,”
Massey says. “We paid too much for some bad ideas
and some good ideas.” Today, his company, Triad
LC, invests in technology companies on a much more limited
basis. “We’re still licking our wounds,”
he says.
Triad is based in the former Watkins-Cottrell
hardware supply building that Massey owns in Richmond’s
Shockoe Bottom. The building, which also provides offices
for Timmons Group, Massey Cancer Center and Priority
Capital Management, is a post-modern marvel with brick
walls, skylights and internal bridges. In Massey’s
waiting area, a spiral staircase in an old elevator
shaft leads to a rooftop patio with a view of downtown.
Massey offers the building as a example of what can
be done with the adaptive reuse of an old structure.
“It can be a delight,” he says. |