|
Monument to shame
Former
Gov. L. Douglas Wilder backs a national slavery museum
in Fredericksburg. But will commercialization ruin the
project?
by Robert Burke
L.Douglas Wilder has reached his promised
land. It is just a patch of woods on a bluff over
Interstate 95 in Fredericksburg, and maybe not much
to look at. But to Wilder, it means the end of the
quest he's been on since 1993, when he announced his
ambitions to build a national slavery museum in Virginia.
For eight years Wilder, the first elected African-American
governor in Virginia and the U.S., has been wandering
in search of a proper site. Initially, to Jamestown,
where African slaves first landed in the New World in
1619. It's hard to imagine any spot more historically
appropriate, but no deal could be made with the church
that owned the land. Then this year to sites in Hampton,
Petersburg and Richmond. Finally, to the hill in Fredericksburg.
Doing the deal there was a breeze; a developer simply
offered the land for free.
Wilder has climbed many hills in his political life
and always shown a knack for finding a place for himself
above, and apart from, the crowd. Passionate about his
latest endeavor, sometimes combative, Wilder proclaims
himself delighted with what he has accomplished so far,
despite the delays. "I have land, I have promise,
I have potential here with this," he says.
The real climb, though, is just beginning. He needs
to raise a massive amount of money - as much as $200
million, by his own estimate. And he has to fend off
stinging criticism that he may be too cozy with a developer
who donated the museum land just to boost the prospects
of his own ambitious project, a 2,100-acre tourism/entertainment
complex called Celebrate Virginia. Wags scowl that by
being so closely linked to this other boosterish project,
Wilder's admirable effort will be cheapened and profaned.
What's more, some national groups say that slaves would
be better honored at a more centrally located and better-known
location, such as Washington, D.C. Wilder's dream is
hardly original, either. There are at least three major
projects underway around the U.S. that in some way plan
to memorialize slavery. All are competing for funding
among governmental groups, corporations and private
individuals, and it's possible all may not get the support
they need.
If that weren't enough, the entire topic is profoundly
difficult historically and emotionally. Slavery slices
right to the heart of how Americans think of themselves,
stabbing at what many would rather forget, namely guilt,
shame and racism. Not too long ago, it was a topic too
loaded to be addressed in a Southern state such as Virginia,
which officially preached a highly sanitized version
of its history that was long on romance and short on
reality.
"It's
not that anybody makes apologies for slavery anymore,
it's just that they want to see it in the best possible
light, which is how Americans want to see their past,"
says Edward L. Ayers, history professor and dean of
the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
at the University of Virginia. "I think it's a
worthwhile endeavor. Whoever does it will have to be
brave."
For Wilder, the effort began soon after he became the
nation's first elected black governor in 1990. During
his term, Wilder took two trips to Africa that sparked
his desire to see the museum built. During a trade mission
in 1992 he visited Goiree Isle, just off the coast of
Senegal, where captured Africans were held before being
shipped off as slaves. The stories, of families being
torn apart and of captives trying to survive ocean voyages
in the dank holds of slave ships, made a deep impression.
"It struck me that this is a story that really
hasn't been told," he says.
Wilder's quest is also intensely personal. His father,
Robert, the youngest of 13 children, was born in Richmond
around 1880 to then-former slaves named James and Agnes.
Wilder says his father didn't like to talk about the
family's slave history. "My siblings didn't press
him as much as I did," he says. "So my mother
had to force my father to tell us about slavery. She
would say, 'Robert, tell the boy what it's about.' And
he would bite down on his pipe and he would tell it
a little." Stories trickled out; when Wilder's
grandmother was sold to a farm 18 miles away, his grandfather
endured beatings for leaving to go see her. "It
instilled in me the need for people to know, because
very few people know about slavery," he says.
What
the museum will look like and how it will tell the story
of slavery isn't yet known. Wilder has said he wants
permanent and rotating exhibits with the focus on "the
world of the slave rather than the role of the slave
holder." He wants to examine slavery's history
in the U.S. and abroad, as well as modern-day slavery
in places like the Sudan in Africa. Exhibits for children
are also planned, along with classroom space for teachers
to use during museum visits. Wilder also envisions a
library with room for 250,000 books, a collection of
oral slave narratives and music, lecture halls and a
1,000-seat auditorium, as well as a reproduction of
a slave ship. Of course all these details are like vaporware.
There are no real designs, no concrete plans. A nationwide
competition to design the museum building isn't scheduled
to begin until February or March. The committee of experts
that will create the museum's programs has so far not
been created.
Today there is barely more than a piece of land and
Wilder's determination to see it through. There is no
paid staff and the museum board includes just two other
people besides Wilder. Wilder says he's recruiting a
board that could have more than 20 members. Such boards
have a sprinkling of celebrity names and Wilder's undoubtedly
will too. The committee he formed in 1993 for the aborted
Jamestown project included Bill Cosby, former U.N. ambassador
Andrew Young and actress Cicely Tyson.
One person formally attached to the project is Michael
Neiditch, a former director of endowment for the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. He's been
Wilder's volunteer advisor for about a year, and in
September endorsed the Fredericksburg site over one
in downtown Richmond. His involvement is a reason many
early descriptions of the slavery museum mirror the
holocaust museum. Both are extraordinarily difficult
subjects. Neiditch, who holds a Ph.D. in history from
Cambridge University and has studied the American South,
says the story of slavery can be told "with dignity
and integrity. I think the time is right for this. We're
mature enough as a nation that we can look at something
dark without fear," he says.
How history is handled can be a sensitive subject in
Virginia. Remember Disney's America? When Walt Disney
Corp. unveiled its plans for a 3,000-acre history-and-entertainment
park near Haymarket in Prince William County in 1993
it expected cheers but got jeers. Critics predicted
Disney would craft a Pollyannish America and chased
the Mouse out of town. Even Colonial Williamsburg has
stumbled - in 1994, costumed performers there staged
an 18th-century slave auction that drew criticism from
the state NAACP chapter.
Others
agree that slavery's story should be told, they just
don't like where Wilder wants to tell it. The donor
of the museum site is developer Larry Silver, who is
building a massive tourism and entertainment complex
of golf courses, hotels and restaurants nearby. Silver's
company is responsible for Central Park, the 310-acre,
mega-retail complex of big box stores. Amid its acres
of asphalt are about 130 stores such as Lowe's, Target,
Best Buy and Kohl's. Coming soon is a Sam's Club and
a Wal-Mart superstore.
"The
thing I keep coming back to is in a generation, how
are we going to feel when we walk around the national
mall and see the holocaust museum and the museum of
Native Americans and other cultures, and here the single
most difficult issue in American history gets put 50
miles down the road in a commercial complex? I think
that's a very difficult situation," says Fredericksburg
Mayor Bill Beck.
Silver says his development will be a home base for
tourists visiting the history-rich Old Dominion and
Washington, D.C. From there they can visit Washington
or Williamsburg or other Virginia sites. Having the
slavery museum next door just makes his project more
attractive. "I don't want it to sound like the
museum's right next to a Wal-Mart superstore,"
he says. "It's not part of the complex." The
museum site will have its own entranceway and a wooded
buffer, Silver says.
Neiditch, too, says having Celebrate Virginia as a neighbor
isn't a problem. "There isn't a museum in America
that doesn't have a neighbor." The museum's design
and the site landscaping will make clear the two are
separate, he says. "We're not going to market this
museum in conjunction with a commercial site."
There is a certain marketing overlap between the projects,
though. Like Silver, Neiditch sees the benefits of being
within driving distance of places like Mount Vernon,
Monticello and others. Visitors can "get a deeper
understanding of 18th and 19th century America."
Wilder's
timing is good for Virginia's tourism efforts. The state
is spending $500,000 over two years to promote African-American
tourism and last month began distributing free copies
of a 36-page guide listing more than 100 African-American
attractions in the state. Virginia is sixth in the country
in attracting African-American visitors.
To say the least, Wilder is making ambitious plans for
attracting tourists. The museum, he says, could attract
as many 2 million visitors a year. That would be remarkable,
considering only a few museums in Washington - the Smithsonian's
air and space museum, for example - either reach or
exceed that number. And Washington obviously has the
critical mass of visitors - 19 million a year, according
to the D.C. Chamber of Commerce.
In choosing the Fredericksburg site Wilder has waded
into small-town politics. Anti-Silver Cos. sentiment
runs high here, despite the extra tax money - about
$7 million a year, Beck says - that the city collects
annually from the big retail projects. Many grumble
that the company gets whatever it wants from the City
Council, which is mostly true. And now, some suspect
that Silver will use Wilder and the museum to grab an
even bigger prize - a new interchange off I-95 straight
into his Celebrate Virginia project. Fredericksburg
Councilman Scott Howson says Silver is trying to do
an end-run on the local road budget, which currently
doesn't include any money for an interchange there.
"What better sort of national emotional issue could
you have in your back pocket than a national slavery
museum?" he asks.
Silver says he wants a new interchange and that the
city needs it. Fredericksburg has just one interchange
inside the city limits; by comparison, Petersburg has
six. With or without an interchange, Silver says he's
going to build the project.
Opposition to the Fredericksburg site comes from others
as well. "Our ancestors, and this is felt by millions
of African Americans, deserve to be honored in the monumental
core of the country," says Paul M. Du Bois, executive
director of the American Slavery Memorial Museum Project.
His group is negotiating for an undisclosed site in
Washington for its museum, projected to be 262,000 square
feet and to cost $210 million. "If you want to
honor Lincoln, King or anybody else this is where you
do it," he says.
While Du Bois insists the museums wouldn't be competing,
it's hard to imagine they wouldn't be pursing the same
donors, artifacts and visitors. In fact, in August Du
Bois faxed Fredericksburg officials a letter opposing
that site and says he's asked Wilder to serve on their
honorary board. Wilder responded with his own fax, saying
he didn't know Du Bois and wouldn't join the board.
"I'm here to tell you there will be a museum [in
Fredericksburg] and there will be sponsors," Wilder
says.
In fact there are several slavery-related museums being
developed around the country. Charleston, S.C., leaders
are planning a $37 million museum on the state's slave
history. In Washington, Congress passed a measure last
month calling on the White House to create a commission
to develop plans for a National Museum of African-American
History and Culture. Lawmakers have said they would
like to use the Smithsonian Institution's Arts and Industries
Building on the National Mall. In Cincinnati, public
and private sponsors supporting the National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center have raised about two-thirds
of their $110 million goal. The museum plans to open
in early 2004.
The Cincinnati project underscores the kind of money
challenge Wilder is facing. Fundraising for that project
began in 1994 and donors include corporate giants Procter
& Gamble, Toyota and the Boeing Company. And 44
percent of its money raised so far has come from federal
or state sources. Wilder is just developing the machinery
for a fundraising campaign. So far he has a commitment
for $1 million from the city of Fredericksburg, and
a still untouched $1.1 million appropriation from the
state. The chances for further state funding are dismal,
though, given the state's budget problems. Wilder also
wants the museum to have no admission fee.
Just to get started Wilder will need a lot of money.
Du Bois, who spent three years working on fundraising
for a planned memorial in Washington to Martin Luther
King Jr., calls Wilder's fundraising goal of $100 million
to $200 million "unrealistic." Raising $100
million for the King project was estimated to cost about
$20 million "if we did it fast," Du Bois says.
At its peak the King program had 55 employees. "It
is amazing thing. You can't start fundraising for $1
million."
To
hear Wilder tell it, support is already building for
the project, though he won't yet say exactly who or
where it is coming from. "You'd be surprised at
the numbers of people nationally who know about this.
People are [saying], 'What can we do? How can we help?
Where do I write my checks?'" He says he wouldn't
accept money until he had a site. With that in hand,
he says he can prepare a more formal pitch, telling
potential corporate or public-sector donors, "This
is what I want you to invest in. Not a dream someplace
in someone's head."
There's an art to fundraising, Neiditch says. "You
need to well articulate what you're asking the funds
for" and be ready to tell donors how their money
was spent. "Most donors today would like more than
writing a check. They would like to have involvement.
If you're serious, you have to have all that in place
before you go and ask." And it takes time. "There
are no set answers. I know museums that have taken 10
years to raise their capital funds. I know museums that
have done it in two or three."
After waiting eight years to get this far, Wilder doesn't
want to wait much longer. He hoped to have made more
progress by now and says he'd like to see something
on the site by 2004. Wilder, who turns 71 this month,
calls his drive to build the museum "part of what
I may have been required to do. To be governor of Virginia
was a tremendous thing, and there will be very few things
that will ever surpass that, but tangibly, this will
rank very high."
Return to Virginia Business - January 2002
|
|