Clarion Ledger

Museum exhibit features Mississipp­i flags throughout state history

- Lici Beveridge Mississipp­i Clarion Ledger | USA TODAY NETWORK

A new exhibit at the Two Mississipp­i Museums offers an up-close look at some of the flags that have flown over the state.

“Flags From Mississipp­i: Emblems Through Time” weaves the story of Mississipp­i through the colorful fabric of the state’s people, culture and government.

“The Two Mississipp­i Museums are excited to share this free, special flag exhibition curated by MDAH staff,” director Michael Morris said in a news release. “We invite the public to explore and examine how flags illustrate the various ways inhabitant­s of Mississipp­i have chosen to symbolize threads of culture and belief throughout time.”

Admission to the exhibit is free. Visitors may see the flags in the FedEx Exhibition Hall on the Museum of Mississipp­i History’s second floor.

“Flags from Mississipp­i” features 20 flags made of different fabrics, with some even made by hand.

The largest flag in the exhibit is a focal point for visitors. It is the flag that flew over the state Capitol during Hurricane Katrina, which caused massive damage throughout the state on Aug. 29, 2005.

Another, an original magnolia flag, was adopted in 1861 as Mississipp­i’s first official flag. It had suffered a lot of wear and tear before it was rescued by conservato­rs.

One flag went where few men have gone before — on the space shuttle Columbia. The flag was brought by Richard Truly, a Fayette native, a shuttle pilot.

“We’re very excited to showcase these historic flags because this is an important part of our history,” said Ivette Ray, director of curatorial services at the museum. One flag that stands out is a reproducti­on of the 5th Heavy Artillery Regimental flag of the U.S. Colored Troops, which was an African American regiment in Vicksburg that fought in the Battle of Milliken’s Bend.

“This flag represents the tens of thousands of Black Mississipp­ians who immediatel­y having the opportunit­y of freedom continued the fight that they had been long fighting against oppression, against their enslavemen­t,” said Drew Gardner, manager of family and community learning at the Two Mississipp­i Museums.

Many of those who fought in the regiment would not live long after the war, falling victim to disease and other causes that were not war-related, he said.

Gardner said the entire exhibit explores the many facets of Mississipp­i history. He and his team provide educationa­l opportunit­ies for students and all visitors to the museum for this and other exhibits.

“We have 20 flags in this space that tell an incredibly diverse, difficult, challengin­g history of Mississipp­i,” Gardner said. “But also, we want to give students and community members opportunit­ies to engage with us in conversati­on and programs with experts beyond just our immediate space.”

Do you have a story to share? Contact Lici Beveridge at lbeveridge@gannett.com . Follow her on X @licibev or Facebook at facebook.com/licibeveri­dge .

 ?? BARBARA GAUNTT/CLARION LEDGER ?? The exhibit 'Flags from Mississipp­i: Emblems through Time,' seen Thursday at the Two Mississipp­i Museums in Jackson opened March 9 at the Two Mississipp­i Museums in Jackson, Miss. State, national and Civil War flags from the collection of the Mississipp­i Department of Archives and History will be on display March 9-Nov. 8.
BARBARA GAUNTT/CLARION LEDGER The exhibit 'Flags from Mississipp­i: Emblems through Time,' seen Thursday at the Two Mississipp­i Museums in Jackson opened March 9 at the Two Mississipp­i Museums in Jackson, Miss. State, national and Civil War flags from the collection of the Mississipp­i Department of Archives and History will be on display March 9-Nov. 8.

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