From Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Allman_Brothers_Band_Museum
In 1970 The Big House was rented from Day Realty for $225 a month by Linda
Oakley, Berry Oakley's wife. The house is located near Capricorn Records,
which was The Allman Brothers recording studio. Also located near the house
is H&H Restaurant, where the musicians were fed by Mama Louise when they
could not afford to pay for food. The first tenants of the 18 room,
4,440-square-foot (412 m2) home were Berry Oakley, wife Linda, daughter
Brittany and sister Candy Oakley, Duane Allman, his wife Donna, and daughter
Galadrielle, as well as Gregg Allman.
Dickey Betts wrote Blue Sky in the living room and Ramblin' Man in the
kitchen of the Big House. “Please Call Home”, “Ain’t Wastin’ Time No More”,
“Leave My Blues at Home” and “Midnight Rider” were also composed by Gregg
Allman while living there.
After the deaths of Duane Allman and Berry Oakley, the band fell apart and
in January 1973 Linda Oakley was evicted from the Big House.
Kirk and Kirsten West bought the house in the summer of 1993 with the
intentions of opening it as a bed and breakfast, however renovations were
too extensive. The house was left in the hands of the Big House Foundation,
a non-profit organization established to turn the Big House into an
interactive museum.
The Big House contains the world's largest collection of The Allman Brothers
Band memorabilia.
On October 11, 2015 a plaque was unveiled to commemorate Kirk and Kirsten West's contributions to The Big House:


Kirk and Kirsten West

Kirk West

Allman Brothers Band manager Bert Holman

Warren Haynes and Eric Hanson performed

Warren Haynes
(Photos by Ron Currens and John Charles Griffin)