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"We're very much trying to get away from the 'great white man's story,' which is how American history has been told," Holmes said. The general history museum will even chronicle natural disasters, including the Mississippi River flood of 1927, Hurricane Camille in 1969 and Hurricane Katrina in 2005. It also will feature prominent Mississippians, including B.B. King, Elvis Presley and William Faulkner. Holmes said the museums will tell history "with many stories." The state used to have a small history museum inside a former state Capitol building in downtown Jackson. Then, officials at the Department of Archives and History officials began talking in 1998 about developing a larger and more detailed comprehensive museum. Legislators later began working on a parallel plan to develop a museum that would focus on Mississippi's civil rights era
-- and that proposal got a boost when it was embraced in recent years by then-Gov. Haley Barbour, a Republican who at the time was considering a presidential run. A study committee recommended putting the civil rights museum at Tougaloo College, a private and historically black school in Jackson that was a hub of activity in the civil rights era. Critics acknowledged Tougaloo's significance, but argued it would be difficult for tourists to find. They also opposed spending public money for a museum at a private institution. In early 2011, when Barbour was laying the groundwork for a possible 2012 White House run, he used his state of the state speech to set the location in downtown Jackson. "The civil rights struggle is an important part of our history, and millions of people are interested in learning more about it," Barbour said in the speech. "People from around the world would flock to see the museum and learn about the movement. ... I urge you to move this museum forward as an appropriate way to do justice to the civil rights movement and to stand as a monument of remembrance and reconciliation." Starting in early 2012, Archives and History officials traveled Mississippi for months. In a series of public meetings, they solicited opinions about how the state's story should be told, focusing particularly on trying to find information from people who had lived through civil-rights struggles. "Everywhere we went, people said, 'Tell the truth,'" Holmes said. Evers' widow, Myrlie Evers-Williams, co-wrote an article this month with U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., supporting the two museums. "Stories help connect us. They are how history has been shared and handed down for centuries," Evers-Williams and Cochran wrote. "They inspire us, teach us, and, sometimes, embarrass us. Mississippi, in many ways, provides America with a clear look into the mirror." ___ Online:
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