Mission
Statement
Founded in 1965, The Charles H. Wright Museum
of African American History serves metropolitan Detroit, national
and international communities. We provide exceptional learning opportunities,
exhibitions, programs and events based on outstanding collections
and research that explore the diverse history and culture of African
Americans.
Vision Statement Top
To be recognized as the institution of
choice for exploring and presenting African American history and
culture.
Overview Top
The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American
History is the world's largest institution dedicated to the African
American experience. The Museum provides exhibitions and programs
that explore the diversity of African American history and culture.
The Museum houses over 30,000 artifacts and archival materials and
is home to the Blanche Coggin Underground Railroad Collection, Harriet
Tubman Museum Collection, Coleman A. Young Collection and the Sheffield
Collection, a repository of documents of the labor movement in Detroit.
The Museum features:
- Seven exhibition areas devoted to African Americans
and their stories.
- The Core Exhibit: And Still We Rise: Our Journey
Through African American History and Culture. The interactive,
multi-level exhibit opened to rave reviews in November 2004.
- A Glass Dome, 100 feet in diameter and 55-feet
high. The architectural wonder is two feet wider than the State
Capitol dome.
- The terrazzo tile creation, Genealogy, by Hubert
Massey located in the Ford Freedom Rotunda floor.
- The Louise Lovett Wright Research Library.
- The General Motors Theater, a 317-seat facility
for live performances, film screenings, lectures, presentations
and more.
- A Museum Store that sells authentic African
and African American art, books and merchandise.
History Top
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Dr.
Charles Wright, an obstetrician and gynecologist, envisioned
an institution to preserve Black history after visiting a memorial
to Danish World War II heroes in Denmark. As a result of this
visit, he was convinced that African Americans needed a similar
resource center to document, preserve and educate the public
on their history, life and culture. |
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In 1965, Dr. Wright
in partnership with 30 other like-minded Detroiters established
Detroit's first International Afro-American Museum. The museum,
known by the acronym IAM, opened on West Grand Boulevard with
dozens of exhibits showcasing such items as African masks from
Nigeria and Ghana and the inventions of Elijah McCoy. A year
later, the IAM traveling museum, housed in a converted mobile
home, began touring the state and spreading information about
the contributions of African Americans. The Museum quickly outgrew
its quarters. |
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In the fall of
1978, the City of Detroit agreed to lease the Museum a plot
of land between John R and Brush Streets to build a facility
five times larger than its predecessor. In order to raise funds,
Detroit Public School students participated in a "Buy a
Brick" campaign, raising $80,000 for the new facility.
Following the students' initiative, a group of adults started
the Million Dollar Club in which each member pledged at least
$1,000. This major fundraiser earned $300,000. |
In 1985, the Afro-American Museum and the City
of Detroit formed a partnership to build a new facility in the city's
University Cultural Center, securing the funding to complete the
$3.5 million facility.
The name of the International Afro-American Museum
was changed to the Museum of African American History and ground
was broken for a new facility on May 21, 1985. Two years later,
the doors of the Museum of African American History were reopened
to the public at 301 Frederick Douglass. The new 28,000-square-foot
structure accommodated a range of offerings. Featuring a series
of exhibits, lectures, concerts, cultural celebrations, festivals
and programs designed especially for children, it preserved the
past and strengthened the future.
Once again the museum outgrew its facility and
grander ideas for a new museum took shape. In 1992, Detroit voters
authorized the City of Detroit to sell construction bonds to finance
a larger building and ground was broken for the third generation
of the Museum in August of 1993. In April of 1997, a 120,000 square-foot,
state-of-the-art facility opened, making it the largest African
American historical museum in the world.
One year later, the Museum was renamed the Charles
H. Wright Museum of African American History in honor of its founder.
The museum continues to serve its community as a place of exploration
and celebration. With generous support from individuals, foundations,
corporations, and government sources, the Wright Museum continues
to be a cultural icon in the city of Detroit and throughout the
world.
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