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After Lucille died in 1983, Armstrong's vast collection of home-recorded tapes, photographs, scrapbooks and other material was donated to Queens College by the Louis Armstrong Educational Foundation. It is the largest publicly held archival collection devoted to a jazz musician in the world. "The house was frozen in time. It was stuffed," Cogswell said. "Louis was a packrat." Queens Councilwoman Julissa Ferreras said the museum has a long-standing history "as being a mini-mecca for jazz lovers" and that Armstrong's "spirit and love of music is still very much a part of the community." Along with the life mask, a 10th anniversary exhibition focuses on Armstrong's six-week tour of South America in 1957. Armstrong was still reeling over the "Little Rock Nine" school integration crisis in Arkansas weeks earlier, and a photograph shows him in his Buenos Aires hotel room defiantly hanging up on the U.S. ambassador, who had asked him to sing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at that evening's concert. More than 100,000 people have visited the museum since its opening. A new visitor and state-of-the-art multimedia exhibition center with a 72-seat jazz club across the street is scheduled to open in 2016. The massive archive will be moved there, allowing its current exhibition space -- the Armstrongs' basement recreation room -- to return to the way it looked originally. "We want to be in our own way the Graceland of New York City," Cogswell said.
[Associated
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