@Null should start a fundraise to buyout Chris's house and make museum out of it in which Chris could live because without him this board wouldn't exist, and Our Lord and Saviour would have to work for some trannies in IT.
Dunno, if it does go up for sale I can look into bootstrapping a 501(c)(3) people can donate to to buy the house but that is a
lot of work. From what I understand, a charitable organization must also be incorporated with 3 board members, so I'd need 2 other people to sign on board and I have no candidates for who that'd be. Then, once it's set up and you file the paperwork, you can start accessing charitable donations but it does take 6+ months for the IRS to review the application and grant you nonprofit status.
Benefits would include being able to put all CWC related hosting expenses onto tax-free hardware that people can make tax deducible donations to.
Aside from the work, it's not clear how museum operations would go. The home is out in the middle of nowhere and in a current residential zone. Chances are if I tried to get it licensed as a museum the city of Ruckersville would not grant it and the neighbors would protest its designation for various, legitimate reasons.
Essentially, a CWC museum only works under these premises:
1. The house is put up for sale without being destroyed. If Cole inherits it, it is very, very, very likely he will condemn and demolish the home and sell the lot.
2. The house is allowed to be operated as a museum.
3. Two people I trust are willing to incorporate with me.
4. One of them is willing to live at premises or very nearby.
5. It receives enough money to sustain it.
Regarding point 4, we would essentially need a salaried person to operate the museum. I suppose tours would be x times a week and people buy tickets online. The house would need to be cleaned up because it is currently fire damaged and smells like smoke and rot. The operator would need to either live in a part of the house not converted to a museum or would need to buy a house nearby to live at so he can conduct the tours. It's probably important actual tours take place because this justifies the museum status and preservation of the home, but you'd need a lawyer to review the plan and that's thousands of dollars.
TL;DR: it's a lot of work and only possible if a set of conditions are met. The more likely result is the house being condemned by whomever inherits it.