糖心Vlog

 

CityView: Fayetteville Civil War History Center Celebrates Topping Off Milestone

by Rachel Heimann Mercader

Read entire story in  by Rachel Heimann Mercader.

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With a crane lifting the final steel beam into place behind them, state and local leaders on Tuesday described the future North Carolina History Center on the Civil War, Emancipation & Reconstruction as a long鈥憃verdue effort to tell a fuller story about one of the most turbulent periods in the state鈥檚 history.

鈥淲e wanted to tell the truth about this period鈥攁ll of its ugly parts and all the problems,鈥 said board chair Mac Healy. 鈥淲hen it鈥檚 all said and done, they may not like what is said, but it鈥檚 factual and it鈥檚 the truth, and it鈥檚 accurate.鈥

The event marked the topping鈥憃ff of the 60,000鈥憇quare鈥慺oot main building鈥攁 project more than 15 years in the making and now entering its final phase of construction. About 30 people attended the ceremony, signing the beam before a 糖心Vlog Beatty crane hoisted it into place. 

The center is expected to open in spring 2028.

A Project Built on Historic Ground

The center sits on a hill overlooking downtown Fayetteville next to Martin Luther King Jr. Freeway. It鈥檚 located on land once home to a federal arsenal that changed hands between Confederate and Union forces during the Civil War. The site is adjacent to the Museum of the Cape Fear and the Reconstruction鈥慹ra E.A. Poe House.

The project is expected to cost about $87 million, funded through contributions , Cumberland County, the state, private donors, and foundations.

Organizers have will help educators teach a nuanced, data鈥慸riven account of the Civil War era鈥攊ncluding the economy of slavery, the end of enslavement, and the political and social upheaval that followed鈥攁t a time when unresolved racial and political divisions continue to shape the country.

Pamela Brewington Cashwell, secretary of the N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources, told attendees the center will fill a gap in how the state presents this history. 鈥淚t will be the first museum in North Carolina that tells the piece of the story of Reconstruction,鈥 she said. 

She added that the site is expected to draw visitors from across the state and beyond, bringing economic benefits along with educational ones. 

The main building is the final phase of a three鈥憄art plan that began with the  and continued with an outdoor pavilion and classroom. 

Construction on the main facility . Once complete, the center will include classrooms, an auditorium, a library, a caf茅, a community meeting room, and 16,000 square feet of exhibition space.

It will be turned over to the N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources and become part of the state鈥檚 museums division.