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Collections at the Alexandria Black History Museum

The Alexandria Black History Museum houses collections relating the history and accomplishments of African American Alexandrians.
Page updated on November 26, 2024 at 2:59 PM

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Collections Highlights

The Alexandria Black History Museum’s (ABHM) mission is to enrich the lives of Alexandria’s residents and visitors, to foster tolerance and understanding, and to stimulate appreciation for the diversity of the African American experience. The ABHM uses its large collection to inspire the public to explore the integral relationship between African American history and other cultural traditions.

With a strong grounding in local Alexandria history, the collections reflect the national and international story of the African diaspora from the early 19th century through today. Photographs, paintings, furnishings, collectibles, and everyday objects provide a glimpse into the African American experience in Alexandria at home, work, and school, during worship and at recreation. Every item and record tell a story that links the past to the present.

Key to the City presented to Samuel Tucker, 1971
Key to the City of Alexandria presented to Samuel W. Tucker, 1971

Objects from the Collection

Important items from the museum collection representing the period from slavery to emancipation include: a receipt from Bruin’s Slave Jail in Alexandria, a manumission freeing a local enslaved woman, and a print entitled First Reading of the Emancipation Proclamation Before the Cabinet, which shows President Lincoln’s cabinet hearing the Emancipation Proclamation for the first time. There is an 1862 biography about Mary S. Peake, an African American teacher who educated the children of people who had formerly been enslaved, and a signed autobiography by Frederick Douglass, abolitionist and orator.

The struggle for civil rights is well represented in the collection beginning with the museum building, part of which is in the former Robert Robinson Library. This segregated library was built in 1940 in response to the 1939 sit-in orchestrated by famed civil rights attorney, Samuel W. Tucker at the Alexandria Library on Queen Street. Tucker would later be presented the key to the City of Alexandria in 1971, shown above.

Celebrating the achievements of more recent Alexandrians, the Museum owns a wet suit and gear that belonged to Shirley Lee, the world’s first African American female scuba diver, and a basketball signed by Earl Lloyd, the first African American to play in the NBA. Both attended segregated Parker-Gray High School in Alexandria. The Museum also documents important national events that affect Alexandria and beyond, such as posters and other ephemera from the campaign and election of Barack Obama, the first African American president of the United States.

African American material culture is represented by dolls, children’s books, toys, religious artifacts, tools, Black Memorabilia, and items relating to the death of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter Movement.

IMLS Grant Received: Increasing Access to African American Archives

Increasing Access to African American Archives

Alexandria Black History Museum Receives Prestigious African American History & Culture IMLS Grant for Digitization Project

News Release, June 11, 2021

Ferdinand T. Day, Annie B., Rose, Ben Holt, Moss Kendrix

The Alexandria Black History Museum is a proud recipient of a $243,356 grant from the IMLS Museum Grants for African American History and Culture that will partially fund a multiple year project that will run from July 1, 2021 until June 30, 2023.

This highly competitive and generous grant will enable the museum to digitize, interpret, and make four important archival collections publicly accessible. Documents, photographs, objects and other material from Alexandrian activists Ferdinand T. Day and Annie B. Rose, Washingtonian opera singer Ben Holt, and public relations icon Moss H. Kendrix will be digitized as part of this grant. The digitization process will include creating or updating catalog records and scanning or photographing collections items, resulting in approximately 20,000 records with images for public access.  The project will culminate in an exhibition on Moss H. Kendrix to open in the spring of 2023.

"As pillars of our communities, libraries and museums bring people together by providing important programs, services, and collections. These institutions are trusted spaces where people can learn, explore and grow,” said IMLS Director Crosby Kemper. “IMLS is proud to support their initiatives through our grants as they educate and enhance their communities.".

“We are excited and honored to be a 2021 recipient of the IMLS Museum Grants for African American History and Culture,” said Gretchen Bulova, Director of the Office of Historic Alexandria. “Support from IMLS permits us share Alexandria’s vibrant African American history with new and wider audiences as well as educate future generations about Black excellence and achievement in Alexandria.”

“By digitizing these collections,” shares Audrey Davis, Director of the Alexandria Black History Museum, “We will be able to provide increased public and research access, improve collections care by reducing future handling, and ensure best practices in collections management. It will also enable the Museum to develop future learning opportunities and programming for life-long learners, families, and school-age students.”

A series of small online exhibitions will also be developed that will explore the stories of these individuals from the archives and their respective roles in the overarching theme of civil rights and equity. These archival collections contain a wealth of material that will allow the Museum to better tell the story of the civil rights movement, self-empowerment, the African American image in American society, and the re-positioning of the African American in the wider American culture. These collections touch on important eras and issues, from slavery to the fight for equality. They bear witness to the stories of local grassroots activism that supported the desegregation of schools in Alexandria, the preservation of African American heritage sites in Alexandria, the global change in the depiction of African Americans in advertising, and the celebration and elevation of the civil rights movement through the operatic art form.

The digital content created by this project will support the invaluable work and ongoing commitment of Historic Alexandria and the Alexandria Black History Museum of telling the stories of the underrepresented and the marginalized and the central role that they play in the American story, both locally and nationally.

Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS logo)

The Institute of Museum and Library Services is the primary source of federal support for the nation's libraries and museums. We advance, support, and empower America’s museums, libraries, and related organizations through grantmaking, research, and policy development. Our vision is a nation where museums and libraries work together to transform the lives of individuals and communities. To learn more, visit IMLS and follow us on facebook and twitter.

Historic Alexandria Collections Online

Historic Alexandria Collections Online

The Alexandria Black History Museum's growing online collections currently include the following. Browse or search the collections at the link above.

  • The Black Lives Remembered Collection
  • Carlton Funn Collection
  • Parker-Gray School Collection
  • Sherry Z. Sanabria Paintings

Collections Policies

Like all professional museums, the Alexandria Black History Museum abides by a Collections Policy in acquiring and caring for collections. The Historic Alexandria Museums worked together to create a set of collections policies that define the scope of each museum’s collections and set policies for caring for them in accordance with the special needs of each collection.

In accordance with the Museum’s collection policy, the object must date from the period of 1749 (founding of the City of Alexandria) to the Present Day, or be relevant to the interpretation and understanding of African American life during that stated historical period.

Collection Goals: Established in 1983, the Alexandria Black History Museum, serves as a resource which today houses collections that reflect the African American experience in Alexandria and Virginia from 1749 to the present. The adjacent Watson Reading Room, located in a building that formerly served as an African American church and school, contains a reference  collection of nearly 4,000 volumes devoted to black  history and cultural traditions. The Museum also supervises the Alexandria African American Heritage Park, a nine-acre satellite site that includes a 19th-century African American cemetery and memorial sculptures by artist Jerome Meadows.

The goals for all three sites are to:

  1. House and collect historic artifacts and information that reflect the African American experience in Alexandria and Virginia from 1749 to the present, with emphasis on the lives and accomplishments of local citizens. The scope of the collection is based upon objects of general historical value to the African American story in Alexandria with a secondary concentration on acquiring objects of significance to African American history in the scope of United States history . The collection includes specialized holdings on African American churches in the 19th and 20th centuries, and an extensive body of documents and photographs that relate to the segregated Parker-Gray High School and the 1939 sit-down strike in Alexandria, as well as notable African Americans and black organizations in the local area. 
  2. Interpret the historic site and historical period 1749 through the present day via museum exhibits and educational programs. Major areas of research and interpretation are:

    a)  The legacy of Alexandria’s African American history and how it relates to the development of the City of Alexandria. 
    b)  The history of enslaved and free black communities  
    c)  The role Alexandria’s Contraband Community and the impact of their struggle for freedom  before, during and after the Civil War
    d)  The lifestyles of Alexandria’s African American citizens during the years of Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the emergence of the modern Civil Rights movement and the effects of Urban Renewal on the minority landscape of the City of Alexandria.
  3. At the Watson Reading Room, house and collect published works on African and African American history, and primary and secondary source materials related to the history of Alexandria.

Acquisitions: Objects accessioned into the permanent collection by means of gift, bequest or purchase. Clear title to the object is held by the Museum.

Collections

Historic Alexandria Collections Online

* Online Collections are marked with an asterisk.

Church Congregation, Nina Tisara photo

African American Churches

This collection, including bibles, a book of psalms, and communion items, supports the interpretation of African American churches from the mid-19th through the 20th centuries.

Portrait of Annie B. Rose, in black hat and pearls

* Annie B. Rose Collection

The archive consists of material relating to the life and work of Annie B. Rose, who dedicated her life to improving the lives of African American people in Alexandria.

Portraits of Samuel W. Tucker, Annie B. Rose, Ferdinand T. Day

Archives

Some prominent Alexandrians featured in the collection include Alexandria activists Annie B. Rose and Ferdinand T. Day (pictured above) and Civil Rights lawyer Samuel W. Tucker.

Ben Holt-Winner's Circle

* Ben Holt Collection

A treasure trove of memorabilia documenting opera singer Ben Holt’s career, including photo albums, scrapbooks, an extensive collection of playbills from his numerous performances, and sheet music. 

Black Lives Matter Collection: Mask and Pins

* Black Lives Remembered Collection

Following the tragic murder of George Floyd in 2020, the Museum put out a call to document the legacy of the Alexandria community’s response to this tragedy and and the wave of peaceful protests and vigils that followed.

Carlton Funn poster on Afro-American History (catalogue B2019.141)

* Carlton Funn Collection

In the late 1950s, 7th Grade History teacher, Mr. Carlton Funn, Sr., began to collect items to make his African American students “aware of their positive heritage,” stories lacking in the school’s history books.

Moss Kendrix CocaCola Ad Set-Up

* Moss Kendrix Collection

Moss Kendrix revolutionized the advertising industry, paving the way for the diversity of actors and models who today are featured in print ads and billboards, television and radio commercials.

Parker-Gray students and faculty, old school (catalogue BHM2012-2-548)

* Parker-Gray School Archives

The Parker-Gray Archives seeks to preserve documents, photographs, yearbooks and other memorabilia relating to the Parker-Gray school.

Formal Event, photograph by Elrich Murphy

Photographs

The collection includes photos by Elrich Murphy who worked in Alexandria during the 1940s and 50s. Other highlights include Carol Siegel’s Spirit of the Neighborhood collection and Nina Tisara’s United in the Spirit collection.

Sanabria Painting (Catalogue B2016-0321)

* Sherry Z. Sanabria Paintings

Alexandria Artist Sanabria’s African American historic site paintings are showcased in the Museum’s exhibition, “Before the Spirits are Swept Away.” The exhibition explores slavery, interpretation, and preservation of African American sites in America.

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