USA TODAY US Edition

Obama says museum to tell ‘shared story’

- By Lindsay Powers USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — The Smithsonia­n National Museum of African American History and Culture “will be a monument for all time,” President Obama said Wednesday at a groundbrea­king ceremony attended by about 600 guests on the National Mall.

The museum, set to open in 2015, will span the broad period of black history from Africa to the present and is the latest addition to the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n’s 19 museums. Since 2003, some of the museum’s collection­s have been displayed in a gallery at the National Museum of American History.

Obama said he hopes visitors to the museum will consider black history and cul- ture within the greater context of American history.

“When future generation­s hear these songs of pain and progress and struggle and sacrifice, I hope they will not think of them as somehow separate from the larger American story. I want them to see it as central — an important part of our shared story,” he said.

“Today we begin to make manifest on this Mall, on this sacred space, the dreams of many generation­s who fought for and believed that there should be a site in the nation’s capital that will help all Americans remember and honor African-american history and culture,” museum director Lonnie Bunch said.

“There’s still a great deal of pain that needs to be healed,” said Rep. John Lew- is, D-GA., a veteran of the civil rights movement. He said the museum needs to tell the “400-year story of African-american contributi­on to this nation’s history, from slavery to the present, without anger or apology.”

Lewis was among lawmakers who repeatedly proposed legislatio­n, passed in 2003, to create the museum.

Rex Ellis, associate director for curatorial affairs for the museum, said roughly 25,000 items have been collected, including contempora­ry and historical art, a silver tea server from a black silversmit­h, Chuck Berry’s Cadillac and a dress that belonged to Rosa Parks.

The museum will sit at a corner between the American history museum and the Washington Monument.

Denise Dennis, president of the Dennis Farm, a charitable land trust in Pennsylvan­ia, said her family has owned the land since it was settled by her free black ancestors in the 1790s. Her family will donate a variety of historical artifacts — including books, flatware and handwritte­n documents — to the museum.

“For us, it’s wonderful, because our story is symbolic of the larger story,” Dennis said.

 ?? By H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY ?? Young donors: President and Michelle Obama greet children from a Brooklyn Montessori school who donated money they collected for the new black history museum.
By H. Darr Beiser, USA TODAY Young donors: President and Michelle Obama greet children from a Brooklyn Montessori school who donated money they collected for the new black history museum.

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