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Subject:
From:
Jon Kukla <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Discussion of research and writing about Virginia history <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 25 May 2010 09:39:53 -0400
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Confederacy museum could be reality in Appomattox soon
By Nolan Connelly
Published: Lynchburg News-Advance May 20, 2010

The Museum of the Confederacy has raised $6 million of a needed $7.5 million
in funding for a satellite location in Appomattox.

“We’re getting really close,” said Sam Craghead, a public relations
specialist for the museum. “The groundbreaking is in the foreseeable
future.”

Most of the funding has come from private individuals and grants. Craghead
said that after a public fundraising effort begins soon, construction could
start this year.

The museum’s expected completion date is “early 2012” after a projected 18
months of construction.

The museum initially planned an opening in late 2011, but was delayed by
fundraising issues and an expansion of the original museum plans.

The new design is 11,000 square feet and located on eight acres of land near
the intersection of U.S. 460 and Virginia 24. The proposed site is a mile
away from the Appomattox Court House National Park.

The satellite location in Appomattox is part of an effort to expand the
number of Confederate artifacts on display. Craghead estimated that visitors
to the Richmond museum see less than 10 percent of the entire collection.

The Appomattox site, Craghead said, will have artifacts and exhibits related
to Appomattox, including General Robert E. Lee’s uniform and sword and the
pen he used to sign surrender documents at the McLean house in Appomattox
Court House.

Other satellite sites will include locations in Fredericksburg, Spotsylvania
and Fort Monroe near Hampton Roads.

The museum is a perfect fit for the location, Craghead said, because the
site “is close to the courthouse, (has) easy access to the roads” and could
help to keep visitors in the area.

Craghead said the museum is looking forward to participating in the ongoing
sesquicentennial observations of the Civil War, which will end on April 9,
2015 — 150 years after Lee surrendered at the Appomattox Court House.

“That’s the important date,” he said. “But we’ll be doing all of other
things out there before then.”

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