Stopped at the NRA museum at Bass Pro...
in Springfield, MO. Was last there a couple years ago and saw a Mauser '88 commercial sporter that was identified as a Mannlicher/Schoenauer rifle. Explained to the curator on duty what the differences were between the two and even showed him since they had a proper Mannlicher/Schoenauer on display and properly identified in another display case. Today, that '88 is still mis-identified so again asked the curator on duty about it. He said that it is too expensive to have just one placard re-done, so I offered to suggest about 10 others that need to be corrected or have the descriptions made easier to read and understand. I then asked how often people noticed and made comments and he told me that so far my father and I are the only ones who have to his knowledge. I think it is much more disturbing that so few people have said anything, than they made a mistake with an identification placard.
 But it IS annoying that a museum would have a mislabled display.  One assumes (yeah, I know) that they'd do their research and put up accurate information, but obviously they don't always do that.  Years ago we went through Castillo San Felipe in Cartagena, Colombia.  They had an old blunderbuss set up as a cap lock that was labled with a year WAY before Forsythe invented his "scent bottle" not to mention the later advent of the common percussion caps the old blunderbuss was set up for.  No, I didn't bother to call their attention to it.  Almost nothing was labeled in there and what was was poorly done, didn't seem like they were interested in doing more than having a bunch of old junk for the cruise line passengers to gawk at.