Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama museum linked to lynching memorial reopening

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A museum that’s linked to the national lynching memorial in Montgomery is reopening for the first time since the pandemic began.

The Legacy Museum, which tells the story of slavery and its legacy in the United States, will offer free admission for a limited time, but crowd sizes are being restricted and face masks are required to help prevent the coronaviru­s from spreading.

The museum and Legacy Pavilion are open Wednesday-Sunday from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

The lynching memorial, the museum and the Legacy Pavilion are all operated by the nonprofit Equal Justice Initiative, which announced the reopening in a statement.

A new museum exhibit explores the Montgomery Bus Boycott, which often is referred to as the start of the modern civil rights movement in 1955. A new exhibit at Legacy Pavilion, located beside the memorial, will focus on slavery in the North, which hasn’t received as much attention as Southern slavery.

“Many coastal communitie­s in the North and Mid-Atlantic region of the United States were built around human traffickin­g and the commerce generated by the enslaving and selling people. This history has a legacy that has not been acknowledg­ed and this exhibit is an effort to address this silence,” EJI founder Bryan Stevenson said in a statement.

Business in downtown Montgomery had urged the organizati­on to reopen the attraction­s, which have received some 750,000 visitors since they opened in 2018, Stevenson told WSFA-TV.

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