RICHMOND, Virginia 鈥 More than six years in the making, the American Civil War Museum officially opened to the public Saturday, drawing visitors from across the country with a message that the war affected everyone.
Christy Coleman, CEO of the $25 million facility, couldn鈥檛 be happier with the project.
She wants people to know that the Civil War had an effect on more than just white men in the South. People who think the war had nothing to do with them may find that their ancestors were involved, Coleman said.
鈥淥r, they will discover that the outcomes of this war affects every American,鈥 she said.
The museum鈥檚 grand opening drew visitors from across the country, and even Canada, as well as Richmond-area residents.
The American Civil War Museum
Location: 500 Tredegar St., Richmond, Virginia, along the James River near Belle Isle
Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
Admission: $15 for adults; less for seniors, retired military, teachers, students and children
For more information: . The phone number is (804) 649-1861.
Darice Spight and her husband are from Detroit, Michigan. They traveled with a group that was touring Virginia historical sites. Spight was impressed by the thorough research put into the museum鈥檚 displays and interactive exhibits.
鈥淚n history, you learn a piece of historical events. But when you go to a museum, they give you more detail,鈥 she said. “It makes you look closer. I think it鈥檚 so cool to see where we came from and to see what people had to go through back then.鈥
Spight added: 鈥淚鈥檇 give it an A-plus. They did a good job.鈥
The museum also drew several Civil War enthusiasts, many of them braving the heat in soldiers鈥 regalia.
Veteran reenactor John Spaziani, dressed head to toe in Confederate Capt. Samuel Cooper鈥檚 uniform, was impressed by the museum鈥檚 historical accuracy.
鈥淭he display of the surrender at Appomattox is impressive because it includes Gen. (Robert E.) Lee, Gen. (Ulysses) Grant and President Lincoln,鈥 Spaziani said. 鈥淯nfortunately, it also has the battle flag of Northern Virginia, but it鈥檚 a part of our history.鈥
Spaziani has been passionate about the Civil War since his parents took him to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, over 50 years ago. He still keeps several booklets that his father had bought him about the war.
Roger Rudder had relatives in the war, including a great-great-grandfather who was killed in battle 156 years ago. Rudder even came with his own artifacts, carrying a 鈥渉air watch chain鈥 from 1857. (In the 1800s, hairwork 鈥 jewelry made of human hair 鈥 was often used in mourning as a way of honoring the deceased.)
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Rudder and his wife Alana were dressed as Jeb Stuart and his wife. They wore the same costumes during their Civil War-themed wedding three years ago.
鈥淎 wedding day is great anyway. But that was our special way to do it,鈥 Roger Rudder said.
The couple was especially excited to attend the museum鈥檚 opening since Roger Rudder had just recently recovered from liver cancer. While visiting Gettysburg a couple of years ago, Roger Rudder complained about not feeling well. After their return, he began vomiting blood.
Alana Rudder added that the doctors 鈥渟aid he had one week to live.鈥
After Roger Rudder was in the hospital for 43 days, doctors discovered that Alana Rudder was a match for her husband鈥檚 liver.
鈥淪he gave me half her liver to keep me alive,鈥 Roger Rudder said.
Alana Rudder replied, 鈥淛ust being able to do this with him again means the world to me.鈥
The couple enjoyed the up-close and personal nature of the museum鈥檚 exhibits.
鈥淲e got to see the watch chain that was made from the mane of Traveler, Lee鈥檚 horse. That was incredible to see,鈥 Alana Rudder said. 鈥淎nd in that exhibit, you don鈥檛 see it behind the glass. You鈥檙e actually right there with it.鈥
The museum contains more than 500 artifacts and consists of nine exhibits in the permanent gallery. A temporary gallery houses 鈥淕reenback America,鈥 an exhibit dedicated to the role money played during the war.
Enthusiasm for the museum reverberated not just inside the facility but outside as well.
At 10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 4 p.m., a Civil War-era cannon was fired on the grounds.
The museum鈥檚 goal is to paint a more nuanced portrait of the Civil War that goes beyond the traditional North versus South narrative.
Exhibits tell the stories of women, African-Americans and Native Americans. They feature not only well-known individuals such as Jeb Stuart and Frederick Douglass, but also everyday Americans affected by the war.
People such as Annie Davis, a formerly enslaved woman who wrote to Lincoln about her freedom after the Emancipation Proclamation, have their stories moved to the forefront and contextualized.
The museum rose from the merger between the American Civil War Center and the Museum of the Confederacy. It is located on the grounds of Tredegar Iron Works, which supplied munitions for the Confederate States Army.
Waite Rawls, president of the American Civil War Foundation, wanted the museum to debunk the misconceptions many people have about the war.
In the museum鈥檚 pre-gallery, there was a deliberate inclusion of people of color and women alongside the more famous faces of Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis.
鈥淔or a hundred years, the story of the Civil War was 鈥榥oble, white Christian men from the North fought against noble, white Christian men from the South,鈥欌 Rawls said. 鈥淚n the gallery, the only pictures of white Christian men are Lincoln and Davis. We鈥檝e got women. We鈥檝e got freed blacks.鈥