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- Press Release
Country Music Hall Of Fame® And Museum Celebrates Circle Guard Initiates
July 25, 2018

- David Conrad, for serving on the museum board for thirty-two years; generously supporting the museum’s capital campaign, education council and annual fundraising efforts; enlisting the help of countless high profile friends—from Chet Atkins and Marty Stuart to Cowboy Jack Clement and Kimmie Rhodes—to facilitate exhibitions, programs and fundraising activities.
- Bill Denny, for investing personally in campaigns for the original museum, the move downtown, and the recent expansion; serving on the museum board for fifty-three years—a tenure longer than that of any other board member, past or present; loyally promoting fiscal discipline, robust preservation and the serious study of country music; donating his family’s Denny-Cedarwood Music Collection to the museum.
- Mary Ann McCready, for helping to advance the vision for arena shows in the series of All for the Hall fundraising concerts, which have netted more than three million dollars for the museum; spearheading a fundraising campaign to recognize the museum’s two chairmen of the twenty-first century with the naming of the Bud Wendell and Steve Turner Boardroom in their honor; tirelessly uniting the music business and the broader business community for the museum’s common good.
- Seab Tuck, for designing the museum’s iconic building—marrying form, function, and meaning in his work to design a structure that welcomes more than 1.2 million people each year; faithfully supporting the museum as a passionate lover of country music and its story; and designing the Circle Guard logo and related recognitions.
- Steve Turner, for demonstrating overwhelming support and leadership as chairman of the museum’s board for the last decade—including spearheading the recent capital campaign and 210,000-square-foot museum expansion; leading numerous charges that have helped connect the museum to its community—from the String City puppet show to an admission program that welcomes Middle Tennessee youth at no cost; serving as an active visionary for the museum and the city of Nashville.
- Kyle Young, for receiving the appointment as the Circle Guard’s first Commander General, in recognition of 42 years of service— starting as a ticket-taker and now leading the museum as CEO; consistently upholding the institution’s mission and the music at the heart of it; helping to establish the museum as a downtown linchpin and a cultural touchstone.