This museum is largely an ethnographic collection of objects related to the material culture into the area, as there are many in Italy and outside. In addition, the collections are rather bundled: too many objects for the space available. But above all there is no attempt to tie objects by a speech. So its value lies above all in the fact that it preserves items that in the future may aspire to transform themselves from a "collection" into a real museum.
I was most struck by the part of the museum that collects objects and documents relating to the war front affecting the Northern Apennines between August 1944 and April 1945, and which took the name of "Gothic Line". Also in this case the museological criteria of the exhibition are rudimentary, but the interest of the exhibited material is higher, because it's not found everywhere ..
The maximum pros of the exhibition is that it documents the civicness the inhabitants (as we understand it) showed by contributing to the formation of this exhibition, through the delivery of items they owned.
Admission is free, and currently (July 2020) it's limited to Sunday afternoons. An offer is welcome.