Black History Becoming A Star Tourist Attraction

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A Virtual Tour of the MLK National Memorial
Washington, D.C.

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In D.C., designs for African-American
museum go on display</font size></center>



Raleigh News & Observer
By Barbara Barratt
March 27, 2009


WASHINGTON — A Durham architect who could help design the next Smithsonian museum envisions a stone building crowned in shimmering copper, evoking the ancient art of West Africa, the American struggle for equality and the joy of the African-American communal experience.

Philip Freelon and his Freelon Group, along with a team of colleagues, are one of six finalists in a competition to design the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall. Their work went on public display Friday.

The winning design will be announced April 14.

Once it opens, anticipated in 2015, the museum will include experiences central to the history and culture of North Carolina, a former slave state and the site of such historic Civil Rights events as the Greensboro sit-in. Today, the state is home to more historically black colleges than any nearly other state in the nation, to a strong African-American musical tradition and to powerful elected leaders at all levels of government.

If the Freelon Group and its team win the design competition, North Carolina would also be home to one of the architects of one of the dozen museums on the National Mall.

Freelon, whose firm formed a team with three other companies, said the group wanted a museum that was "both dignified and exhuberant."

"We tried to let the site tell us what it wants to be," said Freelon, in an interview this week with The News & Observer. "We know we want this building to be more than a vessel that holds exhibits, not just a beautiful building but one that is part of the themes of what the museum will be."

That theme, said museum director Lonnie Bunch, should evoke both historic struggles and community celebration.

"What I really want is a building that gives you a sense of the resiliency and optimism throughout the African-American community," Bunch said Friday at a Smithsonian news conference to unveil the designs.

The Freelon Group and its team based its design on a piece of Yoruban art from the west coast of Africa, a carved wooden figure topped with a three-tiered, trapezoidal crown. It is this corona, the architects said, that forms the soul of their design.

For the museum itself, they envisioned a geometric design in keeping with the other monolithic buildings on the Mall. A stone base is topped with a two-tiered, rectangular copper corona that shrouds the perimeter of the building. The copper shroud will change throughout the day as sunlight hits the metal.

Inside the museum's entrance and lobby, copper cylinders hang from the ceiling of the grand Central Hall like stalagmites.

"They really embraced this idea of how to create a building that works with natural light, both light as a function and light as an expression of what the museum is," said Don Stastny, an Oregon architect who served as a competition adviser to the finalists.

"There is a very strong simplicity and elegance," he said.

Others in the team include London-based architect David Adjaye and Davis Brody Bond of New York City. The group will be judged for the competition in part on its teamwork.

The Museum of African American History and Culture has been years in the making. Supporters fought hard for a site on the National Mall despite a congressional moratorium banning new buildings. The location finally chosen sits on the Mall, between the Washington monument and the Museum of American History.

It was critical, museum officials said, that the new museum respect the towering obelisk and the surrounding landscape.

To that end, many of the designs unveiled Friday point toward the Washington monument. Many of other finalists included elliptical organic elements to their designs.

One rose out of the earth in natural rock. Another was shaped like the spiral of a seashell, moving upward as visitors walked "into the light," Stastny said.

The Freelon Group, which designed the Durham Bulls ballpark in the Triangle, has had a big week. The company, which has 61 architects, won a contract Thursday to design the civil rights museum in Atlanta.

And Freelon already has had a hand in the Smithsonian museum's design.

The Freelon Group was hired two years ago in the museum's first phase to develop a 1,200 page vision for the museum, including the amount and types of space it would need. That plan was given to all the teams now competing in the design contest.

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/257/story/64985.html
 
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Architects Chosen for Black History Museum</font size></center>



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A design concept for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and
Culture in Washington


The New York Times
By RANDY KENNEDY
April 14, 2009


A dream almost a century old moved another step closer to reality on Tuesday as the Smithsonian Institution chose a team led by David Adjaye, the celebrated Tanzanian-born architect, to design the National Museum of African American History and Culture, scheduled to open on the National Mall in Washington in 2015.

The winners of the design competition — which also include the Freelon Group, Davis Brody Bond and SmithGroup — were chosen over five others, including well-known architects like Norman Foster and Diller Scofidio & Renfro.

The museum is expected to cost $500 million and will be built on a site near the Washington Monument after a three-year design period to turn the winners’ idea into a workable blueprint. The museum was established in 2003 by an act of Congress. And although it does not have a building yet, it has already begun collecting artifacts and conducting seminars and other events, including a recent two-day program on the Black Power movement.

Efforts to build a national museum of black history stretch back to the early 1900s, but they were thwarted by political opposition well into the 1990s. Among the opponents was Jesse Helms, Republican of North Carolina, who in 1994 blocked Senate passage of a bill authorizing the museum, saying Congress should not have to “pony up” for such a project. The museum’s cost will be borne half by the federal government and half through private donations.

Mr. Adjaye, who works in London and recently opened offices in New York and Berlin, is known for his colorful and eclectic designs for the Nobel Peace Center in Oslo and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Denver, as well as for the homes and studios he has designed for artists and celebrity clients like Alexander McQueen, the fashion designer, and Ewan McGregor, the actor.

In accepting the commission, Mr. Adjaye described it as “the dream of my career” and said that the group’s concept for the building — an elevated “mound” dominated by a two-tiered structure that he called a “celebration crown” — focused on the idea of a canopy or porchlike setting for people “to come as a respite, to come and view, to learn.” He said he believed that the primary spirit behind the building, whose interior will be open to skylights at its top, would be one of praise.

“Throughout the history of African-American struggle and celebration, there are these moments of praise,” he said. “It’s for us a deeply spiritual and powerful culture.”

The Freelon Group, led by Philip G. Freelon, will be the architect of record for the project. Based in Raleigh-Durham, N.C., the firm has designed the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco and the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American History and Culture in Baltimore. The inclusion of Davis Brody Bond in the group was bittersweet; J. Max Bond Jr., a partner in the firm, a dean of African-American architects and educators and one of a few black architects of national prominence, died in February.

“It is his legacy and his vision that we stand upon now as we move forward,” Mr. Freelon said.

The announcement of the design winners, at a news conference at the Smithsonian Castle, the oldest building on the Mall, was a reminder of the disagreements that have long simmered over where the museum should be built. Some groups had lobbied heavily for its placement south of the Mall, arguing that the new museum would help bring about a much-needed physical and psychological expansion of the Mall beyond its current boundaries.

But the museum’s advisory council — which includes numerous influential black leaders, including Richard D. Parsons, recently named the chairman of Citigroup; Robert L. Johnson, the founder of Black Entertainment Television; and Oprah Winfrey — recommended the 15-acre site that was eventually chosen: across the street from the National Museum of American History. The council rejected three other possibilities, two of which were not on the Mall. In an interview in 2006 Mr. Johnson said he had told Smithsonian officials that he would resign from the council if the Smithsonian’s board chose a site off the Mall.

“To have relegated this museum to another site,” he said, “when people are looking to it to answer everything from the need for an apology for slavery to reparations, would have been the ultimate dismissal.”

Lonnie G. Bunch, the director of the museum, who also served as chairman of the jury that selected the design team, said at the news conference on Tuesday that “as we moved through this process, one thing was central to our thinking: we continue to be guided by our respect for this wonderfully important site.”

He added, “What I can tell you is, this is a building that I think will sing for all of us, and I think that’s what we wanted.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/15/arts/design/15smit.html
 
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The Smithsonian Institution chose a team led by David Adjaye, the celebrated Tanzanian-born,
London-based architect, to design the National Museum of African American History and Culture,
scheduled to open on the National Mall in 2015. The team that created the winning design, left,
also includes the Freelon Group, Davis Brody Bond and SmithGroup. Photo: Courtesy of Freelon
Adjaye Bond/SmithGroup


smith3.jpg

The museum is expected to cost $500 million and will be built on a site near the Washington
Monument, after a three-year design period to turn the winners' idea into a workable blueprint.
Photo: Courtesy of Freelon Adjaye Bond/Smith
Group


smith6.jpg

In accepting the commission, Mr. Adjaye said he believed the primary spirit behind the building,
whose interior will be open to skylights at its top, would be one of praise. “Throughout
the history of African-American struggle and celebration, there are these moments of praise,”
he said. “It’s for us a deeply spiritual and powerful culture.”



smith4.jpg

A view of the lobby design. Although the museum does not have a building yet, it has already
begun collecting artifacts and conducting seminars and other events, including a recent
two-day program on the Black Power movement. Photo: Courtesy of Freelon Adjaye Bond/SmithGroup
 
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NFL Players Association Pledges
to Give $1 Million for MLK Memorial</font size></center>




Washington Post
By Michael E. Ruane
Washington Post Staff Writer
September 23, 2009


The National Football League Players Association has pledged to raise and donate $1 million to the foundation planning to build a towering memorial to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on the Tidal Basin.

The memorial foundation announced Wednesday that the pledge brings its fundraising total to $107 million of the $120 million goal. It also has a $12.5 million letter of credit from the Wal-Mart Foundation.

Officials said last week that the project could get a building permit from the National Park Service to begin work within the next few months. The memorial, which will feature a 2 1/2-story granite relief sculpture of King, is scheduled for completion in 2011.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/23/AR2009092303148.html
 
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A Virtual Tour of the MLK National Memorial
Washington, D.C.


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<font size="5"><center>Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
Personifies Hope, Equality </font size>
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Memorial to man of dreams is on schedule
to open in August 2011 on D.C's National Mall</font size>
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ABC News
By DANIEL STEINBERGER
and AMY BINGHAM
Jan. 17, 2011



As America celebrates Martin Luther King Jr.'s 82nd birthday Monday, the finishing touches are being put on a memorial to commemorate the man of dreams in Washington, D.C. near where he delivered his most famous speech.

The tribute to Dr. King changes the face of the National Mall. The MLK Memorial is in a direct line between the Lincoln Memorial, where he delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech, and the Jefferson Memorial.

"This is going to be the first memorial to a man of peace, person of color, non-president that's situated here on the mall," said Harry Johnson, president and CEO of the Washington, D.C. Martin Luther King Project Foundation.

After 25 years of fundraising, planning and organizing the site is finally nearing completion. Two giant towers of granite representing the "Mountain of Despair" and the "Stone of Hope" stand along the banks of D.C.'s Tidal Basin. Etched in the "Inscription Wall" along the perimeter of the monument are over a dozen quotes from some of King's most memorable speeches.

"Once this memorial is built it's some place for young people to come and see what this man meant, not just to this country but indeed the world," Johnson said.

Johnson said everything was moving on schedule for the public unveiling August 28, 2011, which falls on the 48th anniversary of King's "I Have a Dream" speech.

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar toured the construction site Thursday to assess the project's progress. Salazaar said the monument's goal is "to remind ourselves of his hope, his sense of justice, his quest for equality."

"We are today in 2011 so much a manifestation of his dream," he said.

Washington, D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray also came to tour the site. He said the memorial will help future generations understand King's words of compassion and hope. It may even save lives, he said.

"We live, unfortunately, in a world of violence where we see children killing other children," Gray said. "When this memorial is finished, for so many people who didn't live when Dr. King lived, this will bring further to life is words and his vision."

In a recent AP-GfK poll 77 percent of people interviewed said significant progress has been made toward King's dream, up slightly from the 75 percent who felt that way in 2006. Similarly, more people plan to celebrate King's birthday than did five years ago, the poll found. Thirty percent of respondents will celebrate the federal holiday this year compared to 23 percent in 2006.

With a $120 million price tag, fundraising has been the largest barrier to completion of the memorial, said Dina Curtis, director of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project. The project still needs to raise $12 million to meet their goal, she said.

"This is long overdue," said Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson, who participated in Thursday's walking tour. "It's certainly a fitting tribute."


http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/martin-luther-king-jr-memorial-schedule/story?id=12618214
 
<center>Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
Personifies Hope, Equality


Memorial to man of dreams is on schedule
to open in August 2011 on D.C's National Mall
</center>


ABC News
By DANIEL STEINBERGER
and AMY BINGHAM
Jan. 17, 2011



As America celebrates Martin Luther King Jr.'s 82nd birthday Monday, the finishing touches are being put on a memorial to commemorate the man of dreams in Washington, D.C. near where he delivered his most famous speech.

The tribute to Dr. King changes the face of the National Mall. The MLK Memorial is in a direct line between the Lincoln Memorial, where he delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech, and the Jefferson Memorial.

"This is going to be the first memorial to a man of peace, person of color, non-president that's situated here on the mall," said Harry Johnson, president and CEO of the Washington, D.C. Martin Luther King Project Foundation.

After 25 years of fundraising, planning and organizing the site is finally nearing completion. Two giant towers of granite representing the "Mountain of Despair" and the "Stone of Hope" stand along the banks of D.C.'s Tidal Basin. Etched in the "Inscription Wall" along the perimeter of the monument are over a dozen quotes from some of King's most memorable speeches.

"Once this memorial is built it's some place for young people to come and see what this man meant, not just to this country but indeed the world," Johnson said.

Johnson said everything was moving on schedule for the public unveiling August 28, 2011, which falls on the 48th anniversary of King's "I Have a Dream" speech.

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar toured the construction site Thursday to assess the project's progress. Salazaar said the monument's goal is "to remind ourselves of his hope, his sense of justice, his quest for equality."

"We are today in 2011 so much a manifestation of his dream," he said.

Washington, D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray also came to tour the site. He said the memorial will help future generations understand King's words of compassion and hope. It may even save lives, he said.

"We live, unfortunately, in a world of violence where we see children killing other children," Gray said. "When this memorial is finished, for so many people who didn't live when Dr. King lived, this will bring further to life is words and his vision."

In a recent AP-GfK poll 77 percent of people interviewed said significant progress has been made toward King's dream, up slightly from the 75 percent who felt that way in 2006. Similarly, more people plan to celebrate King's birthday than did five years ago, the poll found. Thirty percent of respondents will celebrate the federal holiday this year compared to 23 percent in 2006.

With a $120 million price tag, fundraising has been the largest barrier to completion of the memorial, said Dina Curtis, director of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project. The project still needs to raise $12 million to meet their goal, she said.

"This is long overdue," said Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson, who participated in Thursday's walking tour. "It's certainly a fitting tribute."


http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/martin-luther-king-jr-memorial-schedule/story?id=12618214

I've given over $200 to the memorial. I plan on quadrupling that amount this year. I suggest you cats give something also. No matter how big or small.
 
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Former marketing director will run
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum


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Bob Kendrick


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Bob Kendrick, the new president of the Negro Leagues
Baseball Museum at 18th and Vine, stood Wednesday
next to the bronze statue of Satchel Paige



The Kansas City Star
By TEREZ A. PAYLOR
March 23, 2011



More than two years after being passed over for a job even the late Buck O’Neil said he should have, Bob Kendrick has been selected president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.

The move represents an abrupt about-face for the beleaguered museum’s board of directors, who in December 2008 voted 8-7 in favor of giving the job to Greg Baker and not Kendrick, who at the time was the museum’s longtime marketing director.

“It’s home,” Kendrick, 48, said Wednesday. “There’s a strong emotional attachment there.”

Kendrick doesn’t say those words lightly. He knows he has his work cut out for him.

Baker resigned from the $115,000-a-year position last fall, around the same time that news broke of the nonprofit’s third consecutive six-figure loss. The museum, which in 2010 had an annual operating budget of $1.5 million, in January canceled one of its biggest fundraisers of the year, the Legacy Awards Show.

“We made a mistake,” acknowledged board chair Betty Brown, in choosing Baker over Kendrick.

No reason was given for Baker’s resignation in October, and he did not return a phone message Wednesday asking for comment.

Kendrick’s love for the museum in the 18th and Vine district and its vision is helping him overlook the pain of being denied the job the first time.

Brown called him in January asking, “Would you consider coming back to the museum if the opportunity presented itself, or are you just done with us?”

After much deliberation — two months of negotiations, in fact — Kendrick decided it was an offer he could not refuse.

He had stayed with the museum for the first 14 months of Baker’s term before resigning last February and accepting an executive position with the National Sports Center for the Disabled. Even after leaving, Kendrick attended several museum functions because, he said, his passion for the project never wavered.

Brown cited that passion as one key reason the board wanted to bring him back. Another is Kendrick’s fundraising chops and connections within baseball.

Brown also said that feedback from the community did nothing to hurt Kendrick’s cause. He was chosen over four other candidates.

“I had community leaders, sponsors and people who were donating money come to me,” Brown said. “When Bob wasn’t there, there was a little concern because the atmosphere was different. He has that charisma, that personality.”

Kendrick’s first order of business is to rekindle relationships with those donors.

“We’ve got some work to do rebuilding the brand, which became tarnished somewhat the last two years,” Kendrick said.

While Kendrick will report to the board, he said he has been assured — and Brown confirmed — that he’ll have the freedom to do what he think must be done to turn around the museum’s fortunes.

“We’ll rely heavily on his opinion,” Brown said. “I don’t think it will be a tug of war. He’ll have as much freedom as he needs with the support of the board, provided he’s doing the right things … and I don’t have any doubt he’ll do the right things.”

Kendrick, who will be introduced today at the museum, isn’t officially scheduled to begin work for a few weeks, but he said he has already talked to several prominent figures in baseball — former stars Ozzie Smith, Dave Winfield and Willie Wilson, among them — who are willing to help the cause any way they can.

Kendrick refuses to think it might be too late to restore the museum’s luster.

“You can stand on the sidelines and watch it happen, or you can get in the game and try to take care of it,” Kendrick said. “My choice was to get back in the game. This museum is bigger than any of us.”

To reach Terez A. Paylor, call 816-234-4489 or send email to tpaylor@kcstar.com.



http://www.kansascity.com/2011/03/23/2748661/former-marketing-director-will.html
 
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Architects Chosen for Black History Museum</font size></center>



smit.600.jpg

A design concept for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and
Culture in Washington


The New York Times
By RANDY KENNEDY
April 14, 2009


A dream almost a century old moved another step closer to reality on Tuesday as the Smithsonian Institution chose a team led by David Adjaye, the celebrated Tanzanian-born architect, to design the National Museum of African American History and Culture, scheduled to open on the National Mall in Washington in 2015.

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Martin Luther King joins Lincoln,
Roosevelt on National Mall​



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Wiley Jones, of Bowie, Maryland, stops by the monuments during his lunch
break. "It's absolutely amazing," he says. "It stands as a tribute to those
whose shoulders I stand on; and this is a reminder of that. This is a
monument to decency and goodness. We should remember, because we
don't act like it now." | Andre Chung/MCT)


McClatchy Newspapers
By William Douglas
August 22, 2011


WASHINGTON — Rep. Frederica Wilson had a chance recently to take a private VIP tour of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial, but she turned it down. Too soon, she said.

"I want to get thrilled seeing it unveiled, to feel the passion," said Wilson, D-Fla. "I want to see the glory of the statue in a finished state. I want to be wowed with everyone else seeing the finished product."

Wilson will be among an anticipated crowd of more than 250,000 spectators Sunday for the dedication of the King memorial — a tranquil 4-acre monument of stone, greenery and trees along the northwest edge of Washington's Tidal Basin that will honor the slain civil rights leader.

Sunday's ceremony, which coincides with the 48th anniversary of King's "I Have a Dream" speech, will officially open the first monument on the National Mall honoring an African-American.

The $120 million memorial is part of a burgeoning number of monuments in the nation's capital recognizing African-American contributions to American life and culture.

On Washington's busy U Street corridor, the African American Civil War Museum recently reopened in a new, 5,000-square-foot home to better tell the story of the 200,000 slaves and freed African-Americans who fought in the conflict.

At the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center, tourists can view two plaques placed by Congress last year to recognize the little-known fact that government-rented slave laborers helped construct the U.S. Capitol building.

Back on the National Mall, plans are under way for the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which will be part of the Smithsonian Institution's 19-museum complex when it opens in 2015.

Ground won't be broken on the $500 million building — to be located near the Washington Monument — until next year, but curators have been busy amassing more than 10,000 artifacts since 2005, and expect to acquire 10,000 more by the museum's opening day.

The prized acquisitions include a silk and linen shawl given to Harriet Tubman by Queen Victoria, a biplane used by the Tuskegee Airmen, items from the popular African-American TV dance show "Soul Train," and the original coffin of Emmet Till, the 14-year-old African-American boy who was brutally murdered in Mississippi in 1955 after he allegedly whistled at a white woman. His open-casket funeral was a focal point in the civil rights struggle.

"What's happening here is, finally, the world of museums and monuments are recognizing what we have known in the last 50 years, and that is the history and import of African-American culture is one of the most important things in our history," said Lonnie Bunch, the founding director of the Smithsonian's African-American museum. "The African-American experience is a constant in defining America. The African-American story is everybody's story."

Kathe Hambrick, the president of the 100-member Association of African American Museums, agrees, adding that interest isn't limited to Washington.

"It's a growing phenomenon nationwide. Since Barack Obama became president we've seen more visitors, especially from Europe," said Hambrick, the founder and director of the River Road African American Museum in Donaldsonville, La. "Museums are the places that hold the collective memories of people. For the first time in the last 40 years, we can look back and be included in that conversation."

But it's been a long, slow process getting there.

The original idea for an African-American museum on the mall goes back to 1915. In 1929, Congress approved creating the museum but provided no funding for it.

In 2003, Congress launched the current African-American museum project when it passed a bipartisan bill sponsored by liberal Democratic Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a civil rights icon and King protege, and conservative Republican Sens. Sam Brownback of Kansas and Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, both of whom have since left the Senate.

"It's been nearly 100 years since the idea of a national African-American museum was first proposed," Hambrick said. "You ask, 'Why so long?' Why did slavery last so long? I don't know."


The national King memorial, by contrast, was 14 years in the making. Situated between the Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln memorials and across from the one for Franklin D. Roosevelt, the 4-acre site conveys the essence of King's message of justice, democracy, hope and love, according to its developers.

More than 1,700 tons of imported Chinese shrimp-pink granite forms three sculptures that anchor the site. One, called "Stone of Hope," features a 30-foot-high, 12-foot-wide likeness of King, cloaked in a business suit and arms folded. The accompanying pieces are called the "Mountain of Despair."

A 450-foot-long crescent-shaped wall made of Atlantic green granite from Canada — quarried by a Minnesota-based company — lines a section of the memorial. Inscribed on the wall are quotes from King's writings, sermons and speeches.

The site gives a nod to nature with 182 Japanese cherry trees, seven crape myrtles and 31 American elms.

"I see a very special memorial," proclaimed Ed Jackson, its chief architect. "I see a memorial befitting the contributions he made to the country and to the world."


But like the Smithsonian African-American museum, the King memorial has had to overcome obstacles. The federal government provided $10 million; the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation had to raise the rest of the money through donations.

The foundation is about $6 million short of the memorial's $120 million cost — a significant amount of money, Jackson said, but not enough to prevent its opening.



Foundation officials drew fire from African-American critics, labor unions and some lawmakers when they chose Chinese sculptor Lei Yixin to execute the project.

Several people have complained that Lei's King looks too Asian and too confrontational.

"I thought the statue was kind of stern for someone who was very peaceful," said James Pryde, an 85-year-old Tuskegee Airman who viewed the statue during a special tour for the famed World War II African-American aviators. "Everything else is lovely, a fitting memorial to a great man."



Some union groups blasted the foundation for paying Chinese workers to come to Washington to assemble the statue.

Vermont's congressional delegation — Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy, independent Sen. Bernard Sanders and Democratic Rep. Peter Welch — wrote to Harry Johnson Sr., the president and chief executive officer of the foundation, in 2007 pressing him to use American granite instead of imported stone because "this great American monument should be built with American products." Vermont produces granite.

The California State Conference of the NAACP registered its anger in 2007 when it unanimously passed a resolution accusing the foundation of "outsourcing" the memorial project to China.

Jackson said foundation officials have taken steps to address the concerns. They quieted congressional complaints by using American stone — Mount Airy granite from North Carolina — on some of the memorial's curb work and crosswalks.



Foundation officials got the blessing of King's children for Lei's likeness of King. Martin Luther King III told USA Today last month that he thought Lei did "a good job" in depicting his father.

Lewis, who spoke at the 1963 March on Washington with King, also believes Lei's work properly captures his idol, mentor and friend.

During his private tour of the memorial, Lewis said, he went to the top of the statue and closely examined the features of King's face.

"I was deeply moved seeing it," Lewis said. "It's the best likeness of Dr. King I've seen anywhere."





http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/08/22/121541/martin-luther-king-joins-lincoln.html


 
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Here is a festival that was left out.

The Gullah are African Americans who live in the Low Country region of South Carolina and Georgia, which includes both the coastal plain and the Sea Islands. Historically, the Gullah region once extended north to the Cape Fear area on the coast of North Carolina and south to the vicinity of Jacksonville on the coast of Florida; but today the Gullah area is confined to the South Carolina and Georgia Low Country. The Gullah people are also called Geechee, after the Ogeechee River near Savannah, Georgia. The term Geechee is most commonly used in Charleston, South Carolina.

The Gullah are known for preserving more of their African linguistic and cultural heritage than any other African American community in the United States. They speak an English-based creole language containing many African loanwords and significant influences from African languages in grammar and sentence structure. The Gullah language is related to Jamaican Creole, Bahamian Dialect, and the Krio language of Sierra Leone in West Africa. Gullah storytelling, foodways, music, folk beliefs, crafts, farming and fishing traditions, etc. all exhibit strong influences from West and Central African cultures.

The Gullah Festival held in beautiful Beaufort, South Carolina celebrates a unique cultural heritage within the United States. Composed of former slaves, the Gullah have a traditional language that is a blending of French, English, as well as African languages, making it a distinctive dialect of its own. This festival is a great way to gain insight into the history of a people that are sometimes forgotten in modern American culture. Celebrate by taking in traditional Gullah cuisine, music and culture at this exceptional heritage festival along the South Carolina coast.

Nigerian Talking Drum - Gullah Festival 2011

This Nigerian dance and drum troupe introduced us to the talking drum.


http://www.gullahfestival.org/
Memorial Weekend 2011: May 26 - 28, 2012



Gullah/Geechee Nation International Music & Movement Festival™ 2011
August 5-7, 2011
http://web.me.com/gullahgeecheenation/Gullah_Geechee_Nation_International_Music_%26_Movement_Festival%E2%84%A2_2011/2011_Gullah_Geechee_Nation_International_Music_%26_Movement_Festival%E2%84%A2.html
 
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10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



1. The Tuskegee Airmen Memorial



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These airmen are easily culture's most acclaimed black war heroes, with countless toys and films honoring their valor. In 1997 this memorial was erected at Walterboro Army Airfield in South Carolina, where the airmen trained during World War II.



 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



2. Buffalo Soldiers Memorial

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"Buffalo soldiers" became the nickname of the black members of the 10th Cavalry Regiment of the U.S. Army in 1866, who are remembered most for their bravery and courage from the Civil War to World War II. Several monuments exist in their honor, including two in Kansas, where the original regiments were first formed. This one, commissioned by Gen. Colin Powell, was erected in 1992 in Leavenworth, Kan. The life-size statue illustrates a determined armed soldier leading his horse.

 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



3. Robert Gould Shaw and Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial

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Courtesy of the Museum of African American History, Boston



It took almost 14 years for artist Augustus Saint-Gaudens to complete this intricate bronze monument, which was unveiled in Boston on May 31, 1897. It celebrates the valor and sacrifices of Col. Shaw and his regiment, whose members were some of the first African Americans to participate in the Civil War. Shaw's story was brought to the big screen in 1989 in Glory, which starred Denzel Washington and Morgan Freeman.



 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



4. Crispus Attucks (Boston Massacre) Monument

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Erected in 1888 and located downtown on the Boston Common, it acknowledges the events of the Boston Massacre, when British soldiers killed five Bostonians. One of them was Attucks, who is often referred to the first casualty of the American Revolution. Although Attucks remains a mysterious figure in U.S. history -- very little information about him can be verified -- he is widely hailed as the first black hero of the war. His grave, located at Granary Burying Ground, is close to the monument.




 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



5. Victory Monument


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Chicago's Victory Monument was created to pay homage to the 8th Regiment of the Illinois National Guard, a unit of African-American soldiers who served in France during World War I. The picturesque monument, made of white granite and bronze, features five figures, including a life-size African-American woman draped in fabric to represent motherhood.





 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



6. The Connecticut 29th Colored Regiment, C.V. Infantry Memorial


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The memorial, erected in 2008 in Fair Haven, Conn., is a circular space that features eight stone markers with a large edifice in the center. Each piece of the memorial, dedicated to the men of the regiment for their "coolness and bravery" during the Civil War, has an inscription with a soldier's name.






 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



7. The African American Civil War Memorial


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Set in Washington, D.C.'s historic U Street neighborhood, the memorial commemorates the 209,145 African-American soldiers and sailors who fought for freedom in the Civil War. The site is complete with a walking and sitting area, walls with inscriptions of soldiers' names and a 9-foot bronze statue.







 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



8. African American Military History Museum


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The museum site, in Hattiesburg, Miss., used to be the USO Club, a space for black soldiers to convene while they served in the segregated Army of World War II. Today it houses mementos and artifacts that tell the story of African-American servicemen and their sacrifices during wartime, from the post-Civil War buffalo soldiers to modern-day struggles in the Middle East.







 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



9. All Wars Memorial to Colored Soldiers and Sailors


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Dedicated on May 30, 1934, this memorial in Philadelphia pays homage to that city and its "colored soldiers." The inscription on the back of the monument reads: "To commemorate the heroism and sacrifice of all colored soldiers who served in the various wars engaged in by the United States of America that a lasting record shall be made of their unselfish devotion to duty as an inspiration to future generations . . . "






 

10 Places Honoring Black War Heroes



10. The African-American Medal of Honor Recipients Memorial


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This Wilmington, Del., memorial, dedicated in 1998, was commissioned to acknowledge the African-American men and women who have been killed or declared missing in all wars since the Korean War. The statue, entitled One Army, depicts a uniformed soldier from the Vietnam War carrying what appears to be a fallen serviceman.






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Barclays Center Honors Legacy of
African-American Basketball in Brooklyn​

Pays Tribute to Historic “Black Fives” Teams with Large-Scale Photographs in
Main Concourse, Community Event with Brooklyn Nets Player C.J. Watson,
and Nets Half-Time Presentation



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A view of the concourse in the Barclays Center,
showing the New York Girls, an all-black female
team organized in 1909. This is one of six in a
special compilation of mural-sized vintage African
American photographic images permanently in-
stalled in the concourse of the Barclays Center



BROOKLYN, February 4, 2013 – On February 10, Barclays Center will honor the legacy of Brooklyn’s African-American basketball history with the installation of six large-scale photographs of the Black Fives, early-twentieth century African-American basketball teams, throughout the arena’s main concourse. The images depict players from Brooklyn’s own Black Fives team, the Smart Set Athletic Club, established in 1906 as the first fully independent, formally organized African-American basketball team; their female counterparts, the Spartan Girls Athletic Club; and a related team from Manhattan, the New York Girls. The installation of the photographic images continues Barclays Center’s commitment to presenting arts and culture projects that celebrate Brooklyn’s diverse population and dynamic history by making the borough’s basketball legacy accessible to a contemporary audience.

The Black Fives teams were an integral part of African-American basketball from 1904 to 1950, prior to the racial integration of the National Basketball League in the 1940s and the National Basketball Association in 1950. Like baseball’s Negro League, Black Fives teams represented most major American cities and were made up of exceptional athletes who helped to shape the modern game. Until recently, the story of the Black Fives has remained largely untold.

To mark the unveiling of the images and honor the legacy of the Black Fives, Barclays Center hosted a community event today, during which Claude Johnson, founder and executive director of the Black Fives Foundation, shared insights on the historic teams with three generations of Brooklyn’s basketball players: descendants of Brooklyn’s Black Fives team, Brooklyn Nets player C.J. Watson, and students from P.S. 282 in Park Slope. Watson and Johnson then participated in a clinic for the local fourth and fifth graders in which they taught the rules that were used in basketball one hundred years ago, during the Black Fives era.

The six Black Fives images will be on view for the first time on February 10 when the Brooklyn Nets host the San Antonio Spurs. Claude Johnson and several descendants of Brooklyn’s Black Fives team will be honored during a special half-time presentation at center court, and fans will be invited to view the photographs in the arena’s main concourse. Special giveaways and a half-time video will also help celebrate Black History Month and the Black Fives legacy in Brooklyn.

“Barclays Center is a crossroads for Brooklyn, and honoring the Black Fives is a great way to bring sports, Brooklyn’s history, and our community together in a meaningful way,” said Bruce Ratner, developer and majority owner of Barclays Center. “As professional basketball once again comes to life in Brooklyn, it’s a perfect moment to recognize the men and women who showed incredible commitment to the sport by being among the borough’s first players.”

“The men and women who played during the Black Fives era were true basketball pioneers who opened doors for generations of African-American players,” said Claude Johnson. “This installation represents a milestone in the recognition of this important history, its pioneers, and their descendants. I can’t think of a better time or place to celebrate their legacy than during Barclays Center’s first Black History Month and the Nets inaugural season in Brooklyn. Wherever I tell the story of the Black Fives, I see personal connections being made by students, players, and sports fans of all ages and backgrounds. The success of these teams ushered in the Harlem Renaissance period, smashed the color barrier in pro basketball, and helped pave the way for the Civil Rights Movement.”

About the Black Fives Foundation

The Black Fives Foundation is committed to telling the story of the pre-1950 history of African-Americans in basketball in order to teach leadership and character development, promote educational advancement, enrich appreciation of culture and the arts, build fitness and health awareness, encourage community-based youth programming, and advocate for the recognition of the era’s pioneers and their descendants. The Foundation enables these efforts through innovative uses of technology as well as via traditional means. The Foundation connects fans of the Black Fives with meaningful causes in the communities where the pioneering teams originally played, including Brooklyn, Harlem, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Pittsburgh, Newark, and Los Angeles.

The newly established Black Fives Foundation is incorporated in Washington, D.C. and will be organized under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, operating exclusively for charitable purposes to research, preserve, exhibit, and promote the pre-1950 history of African American basketball teams (the “Black Fives Era”).

www.blackfivesfoundation.org




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