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  • Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

    Slavery museum's appeal
    September 23, 2006 12:52 am

    From WIRE and STAFF REPORTS

    RICHMOND--If every American contributes $8, the U.S. National Slavery Museum could open exhibits as early as next year, Bill Cosby, a key contributor to the project, said yesterday.

    Cosby joined Richmond Mayor Doug Wilder in launching a new campaign to raise $100 million toward the Fredericksburg museum's $200 million cost by asking people to give up what Cosby termed "the price of two shots of Scotch."

    Cosby also encouraged parents to donate on their kids' behalf.

    "The incentive is that they would join in with the rest of the United States of America in saying yes, as an American, I gave $8 to help build something that tells the story," he said in a teleconference with Wilder. "This is needed. Period."

    Cosby has already committed to donating at least $1 million to the museum.

    Cosby said he came up with the $8 idea while brainstorming on what the average American could afford to give. Wilder said the number also has symbolic significance to what is touted as the first national museum dedicated solely to telling the story of American slavery.

    "The figure 8, in shape, is both of the shackles, which is the symbol of slavery," said Wilder, a former Virginia governor and the grandson of slaves. "If you turn it on its side, it's the symbol of infinite freedom."

    Incidentally, if each of the country's 288.4 million men, women and children donated $8 toward the museum, its coffers would boast $2.3 billion. (If the appeal is strictly limited to adults, the cash drops to $1.7 billion.)

    The campaign marks the latest attempt at fundraising for a project in the works for more than a decade.

    Wilder struggled to find a location before settling on a site in the Silver Cos.' Celebrate Virginia South near the Rappahannock River in Fredericksburg.

    Some exhibits were supposed to open in 2003. Later, the date was pushed to 2007.

    "In terms of whether the museum will be open next year, no, it won't," Wilder said. "Will some parts of it be open next year? It might be."

    The primary problem has been raising funds, organizers acknowledge.

    Fundraising seemed to get a jolt in February, when organizers had to reschedule a gala after high ticket sales forced them to look for a larger venue.

    The event, rescheduled for June, attracted 1,100 people to Washington's Warner Theatre, where they watched performances by Cosby and entertainer Ben Vereen.

    Before the gala, museum officials said they'd raised about $50 million toward the facility's construction. They apparently have not revised those figures--Wilder repeated the number during yesterday's teleconference.

    Cosby said organizers continue to wrestle with limited corporate participation. He blamed the stigma of slavery.

    "Corporate America is having a terrible problem coming up and divvying up with the money," he said, speaking from his home in Massachusetts. "They're more worried about whose feelings they would hurt if this museum is built."

    In an Aug. 14 Business Week article, Wilder said some of the corporations he'd approached for support described his efforts as "trying to pull scabs off of old wounds."

    "It's so inflammatory," Fredericksburg Mayor Tom Tomzak said yesterday. "But that's why the museum is needed."

    Tomzak and several other City Council members said they were not invited to participate in yesterday's conference.

    "It would have been nice had they done that," Tomzak said.

    An article in a Richmond magazine earlier this month hinted that Wilder might want to move the museum--slated for 38 acres in Celebrate Virginia--to Richmond, a city that refused to offer incentives for the project years ago.

    Fredericksburg City Councilwoman Debby Girvan said she read the Sept. 13 article in Style Weekly and immediately called Vonita Foster, the museum's executive director.

    "She assured me that those rumors had been going around for a while," Girvan said. "I was assured it was staying here."

    Yesterday's announcement shifts the fundraising focus to the grass-roots level. Now Cosby said it's time to target "foot soldiers."

    "This kind of campaign generally fails badly," he said. "But I'm going to try again because I'm going to present this national slavery museum as a jewel that's missing in a crown."



    ON THE NET: www.usnationalslaverymuseum.org


    ----------
    Copyright 2006 The Free Lance-Star Publishing Company.

    Article found online at: http://www.fredericksburg.com/News/F...9232006/224101
    Last edited by dusty27; 12-19-2006, 02:00 PM.
    Sincerely,
    Emmanuel Dabney
    Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
    http://www.agsas.org

    "God hasten the day when war shall cease, when slavery shall be blotted from the face of the earth, and when, instead of destruction and desolation, peace, prosperity, liberty, and virtue shall rule the earth!"--John C. Brock, Commissary Sergeant, 43d United States Colored Troops

  • #2
    Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

    Cosby's call gets thumbs up

    Would Americans donate $8 to the planned slavery museum in Celebrate Virginia? Most in a random sampling here said yes.

    By KELLY HANNON

    Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
    September 24, 2006

    If people on the streets of Fredericksburg are an accurate barometer, most adults and teens are willing to donate $8 to support the U.S. National Slavery Museum.

    "I'd consider it. I'm not sure about where I'd send it," said Scott Quann, a student at Fredericksburg Christian School. For him and his friends, $8 translates into a CD or food, he said.

    "Who do I give it to?" Quann asked.

    Only a handful of people were familiar with the museum's newest initiative until it was explained: Comedian Bill Cosby and Richmond Mayor Doug Wilder on Friday announced a $100 million fundraising campaign to open the National Slavery Museum in Fredericksburg.

    To get things rolling, Cosby asked each American to donate $8. Cosby has already pledged $1 million to the museum, scheduled to open on land in Celebrate Virginia in 2008.

    They picked $8 because they thought every American could afford to give this amount, and the figure 8 is the shape of shackles used to secure slaves.

    Cosby said he realized this type of campaign "generally fails badly, but I'm going to try again because I'm going to present this national slavery museum as a jewel that's missing in a crown."

    If all Americans--288.4 million men, women and children--each gave $8, the campaign would raise $2.3 billion.

    Paula Royster, a Spotsylvania County resident and president of the Center for African-American Genealogical Research Inc., thinks the $8 appeal will be a success. She was attending a Black Arts Festival at the original Walker-Grant School in Fredericksburg.

    "That's lunch for one day. It's probably 3 gallons of gas. You can spend $8 a day, $40 a week on things we can't account for. It's a very small sacrifice to make. I'm sure people will respond," Royster said.

    Another festival-goer, Annyoz Hamm, is eager to contribute $8.

    "I think we need more than the block on the corner," Hamm said, referring to a marker at the corner of Charles and William streets in downtown Fredericksburg where slaves were once auctioned.

    "There's a lot of history here young people need to be told. They've never heard of 'Roots.' They only know Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X," said Hamm, a youth counselor and Fredericksburg resident.

    But Elaine Tompkins of Spotsylvania, who was walking along Caroline Street, said she would not contribute $8 to the museum--she thinks such a facility belongs in Charleston, S.C., not Fredericksburg. And she would prefer that a national museum focus on the achievements of black Americans.

    "I think there's too much emphasis put on the slavery part," Tompkins said.

    The Rev. Hashmel Turner, a Fredericksburg city councilman, offered the city's greeting at the Black Arts Festival.

    He said the appeal has gotten people's attention. Even if it falls short of netting $8 per American, the new wave of donations will go a long way toward building the museum, he said.

    "There are many Americans that are going to step up to the plate," Turner said.

    For information about the U.S. National Slavery Museum, and to donate, go online to usnational slaverymuseum.org or call the museum's offices at 540/548-8818. Donations can also be mailed to the United States National Slavery Museum, 1320 Central Park Blvd., Suite 251, Fredericksburg, Va. 22401.




    Eric
    Eric J. Mink
    Co. A, 4th Va Inf
    Stonewall Brigade

    Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

      It is my humble opinion that something like this is overdue. And thanks, Emmanuel, for posting this story so it could be brought to our attention. Is it the fund raising method or that this museum is going to be built that is so controversial? I fail to see how something like a museum proposal like this could offend anyone. If one were to compare slavery with the Holocaust there could be seen many similaraties regarding a sad time in a nation's history that most would soon forget. But as Dignann noted, so few today have heard about Roots as to have no clue about slavery, short of reading a few chapters in a history book, and often information is so watered down or so emotional that cliche's often surface as fact.
      My wife and I homeschool, and even now she is teaching about Abolitionists, the "drinking gourd" & etc., and about the risks that many anti-slavery citizens, north and south, slave and free, took.
      At the risk of a recomendation to visit the web site myself (which I intend to do shortly), when is the proposed completion date for the museum, if sufficient funds are raised? I ask this because my family is planning on traveling to Washnigton D.C. next summer and this would be a great site to visit.

      -Jay Reid
      Dreamer42
      Jay Reid

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

        Kaine backing museum funds
        December 19, 2006 12:50 am


        By CHELYEN DAVIS
        RICHMOND--Gov. Tim Kaine has proposed giving $250,000 to the U.S. Slavery Museum, scheduled to be built in Fredericksburg and spearheaded by former Gov. Doug Wilder.

        The governor's budget amendments, announced last week, include $250,000 for the slavery museum next year. The money must still be approved by the House and Senate before it's added to the budget.

        Kaine spokesman Kevin Hall said Wilder did not formally request any state help. Instead, Kaine's administration received a letter from the museum's Executive Director Vonita Foster, requesting financial support for the slavery museum but not specifying a dollar amount.

        Kaine chose the $250,000 figure, Hall said.

        "To my knowledge there was never any discussion about amounts, so when the governor was looking at the non-states, recognizing that individual lawmakers often step up and propose even more, decided he would propose the quarter-million just as a gesture of support for the project," Hall said.

        That is not out of line with the amounts Kaine put in his budget for 37 other state museums and cultural attractions--most ranged from $100,000 to $500,000. In all, the governor budgeted $7.5 million for such programs.

        The slavery museum and those other attractions fall under the category of "non-state agencies" --things that are not the state's responsibility, but which wind up getting state support when the state budget is flush.

        Sen. John Chichester, R-Northumberland, said when he reviews the governor's budget amendments during the upcoming legislative session, he'll view this as "just another non-state agency.

        "Two-hundred-fifty-thousand is a little bit heavy, but it's not unprecedented," Chichester added.

        Earlier this year, museum officials said cash and pledges toward the project total about $50 million, half of what is needed to construct the 290,000-square-foot museum . They want another $100 million as an endowment.

        The museum, which is being designed by architect Chien Chung Pei, will be built on 38 acres in Fredericksburg's Celebrate Virginia development, on a hill overlooking the Rappahannock River.



        To reach CHELYEN DAVIS: 804/782-9362
        Email: cdavis@freelancestar.com

        Online at: http://www.fredericksburg.com/News/F...2192006/244991
        Sincerely,
        Emmanuel Dabney
        Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
        http://www.agsas.org

        "God hasten the day when war shall cease, when slavery shall be blotted from the face of the earth, and when, instead of destruction and desolation, peace, prosperity, liberty, and virtue shall rule the earth!"--John C. Brock, Commissary Sergeant, 43d United States Colored Troops

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

          Do they give an address for donations to be sent?
          Has anyone on the A/C spearheaded any support, other than this the news provided in this thread?
          Pat Brown

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

            Lindsey,



            Mr. Cosby should make an appeal to all the high earning athletes out there of African American decent to chip in on this project.
            Mike "Dusty" Chapman

            Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

            "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

            The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

              Originally posted by brown View Post
              Do they give an address for donations to be sent?
              Has anyone on the A/C spearheaded any support, other than this the news provided in this thread?
              I think it's an important point you raise. The funding of the Slavery Museum is a project that this community should jump on board with.

              I'd give more than $8, I assure you.
              Paul Calloway
              Proudest Member of the Tar Water Mess
              Proud Member of the GHTI
              Member, Civil War Preservation Trust
              Wayne #25, F&AM

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                Originally posted by dusty27 View Post
                Lindsey,



                Mr. Cosby should make an appeal to all the high earning athletes out there of African American decent to chip in on this project.
                I see your point but I don't think African Americans should be expected to raise more than the rest of us. This is an American issue - not just an issue for blacks.
                Paul Calloway
                Proudest Member of the Tar Water Mess
                Proud Member of the GHTI
                Member, Civil War Preservation Trust
                Wayne #25, F&AM

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                  Mr. Calloway,
                  What do you feel is the best way for us as a community to promote this? Obviously Mr. Dabney started the ball by posting the first (and third) articles. What is the next step to encourage folks to step-up as Americans? Beyond giving, what can an individual do around here?
                  Lindsey
                  Pat Brown

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                    Paul,

                    I wasn't implying that black athletes should give more than anyone else. I just think that it is, and should be, a matter of pride for African Americans to be able the tell the truth about what happened to their relatives. We hear about how folks "give back" once they become famous. I was just saying that this might be a good path of raising some serious money.

                    Lindsey,

                    As to your question, I would think that those involved would need to advertise this venture more. I hadn't heard about it until I saw it here on the forums. Something that we all can do is to write an opinion piece for our local newspapers telling everyone about the museum and its need for money. Free advertising, so to speak.
                    Mike "Dusty" Chapman

                    Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

                    "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

                    The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                      I think that building the Museum is a grand idea. I think that all Americans of every descent should be able to tell the story of the journey of their people. That is what America is all about. Reminds me of this Iraqi soldier that asked me about the different nationalities of the Ameirican Soldier, I just smiled and said, "I didn't notice". He was persistant and asked me about the "Mexican American" and the "African American" Soldier. I told him "there was no such thing as an African or Mexican American Soldier, but that we were all Americans of different descents."

                      Emmanuel, hope you are able to have some "In-put" on the project.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                        Well, my opinion asked...;) Take it or leave it.

                        In unrelated news to this note I have been praising Cosby for many other things but this as well.

                        Virginia should be the home of the National Slavery Museum. Virginia for decades had the largest number of slaves, a sizeable number of free blacks, and at many times a surplus of slaves.

                        I have met Dr. Foster and find her to be an excellent lady who should be able to lead the museum. I am still interested in how the exhibits will portray the experience of the enslaved and the enslaver but time will tell on that (projected date opening of 2008 assuming they get the money to build it within the next year).

                        I think alerting your locality about the value of having such a museum, alerting them it is even in the making, and informing them about the history and importance of the institution in the U.S. (and if possible in your locality) will serve a great purpose. Whether it gets people to donate or not is another story but it will at least let the story of slavery not be forgotten.

                        I again argue trying to make it personal as possible to your community. For example, if you are a resident of Charleston, S.C. write an article and let your fellow residents become aware of the first president of Wilberforce University. He was Charleston native Daniel Payne. He, a free black, was raised by his enslaved aunt after becoming an orphan and went North and went on to this notable achievement. If you live in Charleston, don't let his story be forgotten. Tell people that in his memory, that of his aunt, and countless thousands others that they should support in donation or visiting this museum.

                        I am looking forward to the opening and I am hoping for a fair, unbiased view at the experience of enslaved and free blacks, their white, black, and Indian/Native American enslavers, males and females, adults and children, filled with a collection that will make that experience come to life. Let it be a place of education and healing for centuries of hatred and misunderstanding of these primary cultures who co-exist on the American landscape.

                        As Mr. Beasley and Paul have noted this is what PBS would call an American experience and all Americans should be interested in how this develops.
                        Last edited by Emmanuel Dabney; 12-19-2006, 09:29 PM.
                        Sincerely,
                        Emmanuel Dabney
                        Atlantic Guard Soldiers' Aid Society
                        http://www.agsas.org

                        "God hasten the day when war shall cease, when slavery shall be blotted from the face of the earth, and when, instead of destruction and desolation, peace, prosperity, liberty, and virtue shall rule the earth!"--John C. Brock, Commissary Sergeant, 43d United States Colored Troops

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                          Emmanuel:

                          Gov/Mayor/soon-to-be senator Wilder has tried to sustain the momentum gathered by Dr. Cosby's call to the check books. Trouble is, as with so many other worthy projects, he is a single voice with a fairly screwed up city to run. Say what you will, but Ole Doug is doing a yeoman's job in the City of Monuments.

                          Is there a fund raiser event in this? Fredericksburg is a tough town in which to enlist local support for much of anything. A national focus? It is possible but will take coordination.

                          The point has been made here, let's see what can be done. This is a great forum to brainstorm.

                          By the way, this is all about history.
                          Ley Watson
                          POC'R Boys Mess of the Columbia Rifles

                          [B][I]"The man who complains about the way the ball bounces is likely the one who dropped it."[/I][/B]

                          [I]Coach Lou Holtz[/I]

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                            It appears that they're having some success soliciting donations.


                            Slavery museum fundraising increases

                            Fundraising up for slavery museum, according to 2005 tax filing

                            By EDIE GROSS

                            Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
                            December 21, 2006

                            Though far from its $100 million goal, the U.S. National Slavery Museum raised almost 10 times as much money in 2005 as it did in 2004, according to tax forms filed by the organization.

                            The museum reported $938,186 in gifts, grants and contributions during fiscal year 2005. It reported raising $97,674 the year before.

                            The museum's marketing efforts increased in 2005, and it relied on publicity from supportive entertainers such as Bill Cosby and Ben Vereen to get the word out, said spokesman Matt Langan.

                            "Early in '05, they put their stake in the ground to really drive awareness to the museum itself," he said.

                            That year's earnings brought to nearly $19 million the amount of public support provided to the museum since 2001. Most of that--$15.8 million--is associated with the 38-acre site in Celebrate Virginia donated by the Silver Cos.

                            Another $1 million was approved by the Fredericksburg City Council in 2002. That money is being repaid through a special tax district in Celebrate Virginia.

                            Since July 2005, museum officials have maintained that they have $50 million in cash and pledges toward their $100 million project. The tax form filed with the IRS does not include information on pledges.

                            Last year's Hurricane Katrina diverted donations from lots of nonprofits outside the devastated areas, including the slavery museum, said Langan. Officials are hoping donors will make good on their pledges in the coming year, he said.

                            Money raised this summer at the museum's fundraising gala at the Warner Theatre in Washington will be included on the organization's 2006 tax form, known as a 990. Langan said yesterday that the gala donations hadn't been totaled yet.

                            In September, Cosby, who himself has pledged $1 million toward the project, asked each American to donate $8 to the museum's creation. Since then, Langan said, officials have noticed a "spike" in grass roots giving.

                            Gov. Tim Kaine has proposed giving $250,000 to the museum in the state's 2007-08 budget. That still must be approved by the House and Senate during next year's session.

                            The 290,000-square-foot facility is scheduled to open on the banks of the Rappahannock River in Celebrate Virginia by 2008, but museum officials have promised some kind of "soft opening" next year.

                            Plans for the facility call for a full-size replica of a slave ship, 10 permanent galleries, a 450-seat amphitheater, two libraries, a lecture hall, several classrooms and an outdoor garden featuring sculptures, commemorative walls and tobacco and cotton crops.

                            The facility has already collected between 5,000 and 6,000 slavery-related artifacts, including furniture, documents, shackles and collars.

                            The museum also added two new directors to its board in 2005, bringing the total to nine. They are Larry Silver, chief executive officer of the Silver Cos. and John Elkington, CEO of Performa, a Memphis entertainment real-estate development company.

                            "The ball is definitely moving in the right direction for the museum," Langan said.




                            Eric
                            Eric J. Mink
                            Co. A, 4th Va Inf
                            Stonewall Brigade

                            Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Slavery Museum: Fundraising and Debates Continues

                              Murky and slow

                              The National Slavery Museum seems to be making little headway

                              Editorial

                              Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star
                              December 27, 2006

                              Murky and slow

                              Does the National Slavery Museum have a viable plan?

                              AFIRST-RATE MUSEUM devoted to the story of American slavery would illuminate a related story now told to battlefield visitors each year at Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Spotsylvania Court House, and the Wilderness--places that would have escaped the bloody renown of history had human bondage never crept onto this continent. But will the proposed National Slavery Museum ever tell its part of the saga?

                              The struggle to open the museum, a long-held dream of L. Douglas Wilder, a former Virginia governor, has waxed for more than twice as long as the Civil War itself, but museum officials have little to show for their activities beyond a parcel, valued by them at $15.8 million, that was donated by the Silver Cos. in 2001 to site the facility. All other public donations tote up to $3.2 million. In fiscal 2005, reveal tax forms, the museum raised $938,186 in gifts and grants, while spending $603,897. If the institution's cost is reckoned at $200 million, a commonly cited sum, at this rate it should be going great guns in just a few centuries.

                              True, the museum's financial health could be more hale than its current assets suggest. Museum honchos say they have cash and pledges totaling about $50 million. But the latter by a wide margin predominate. And questions arise about the bankability of those pledges. Some have yet to be redeemed, museum officials say, because would-be donors shunted dollars to the victims of Hurricane Katrina. Are the pledgers likely now to come through when the museum fails to raise even $1 million in hard cash in a single year? Are potential donors apt to whip out the checkbook when they learn that museum leaders today can't put a dollar figure on the gifts raised at a celebrity gala that took place in June?

                              A hard-headed observer--the only kind you want to size up a multimillion-dollar project hinging mostly on goodwill and trust--might well conclude that Mr. Wilder's museum is going nowhere fast. Some exhibits, after all, were to have premiered in 2003. The curtain hasn't gone up yet.

                              Do museum directors have a coherent strategy for raising the money needed to open and operate, in the near future, a top-quality facility for teaching about American slavery? Outside of their small and taciturn band, no one really knows. If they do have a plan, it's the first story they should be eager to tell.




                              Eric
                              Eric J. Mink
                              Co. A, 4th Va Inf
                              Stonewall Brigade

                              Help Preserve the Slaughter Pen Farm - Fredericksburg, Va.

                              Comment

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