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Mall and Chains
Visit Celebrate Virginia, your summer playground for golf, shopping, and slavery!

Cover Story

Visit Celebrate Virginia, your summer playground for golf, shopping, and slavery!

Photographs by Charles Steck

Cruising for fun on I-95 usually means a 90-minute ride to Paramount's Kings Dominion. Where else can you climb a replica of the Eiffel Tower, plunge over a waterfall without suffering a concussion, and shoot out of a big bad fake volcano at 70 miles an hour--all in a single afternoon?

But former Virginia Gov. Douglas Wilder wants to throw a detour in the family cow path about 50 miles south of Washington. It's called Celebrate Virginia. A sprawling 2,400-acre "Visitor's Campus" on the outskirts of Fredericksburg, Celebrate Virginia will have everything you and your loved ones could want: restaurants, shops, hotels, even a convention center.

There will also be three championship golf courses. And after 18 holes, you can take a tour of the interior of a re-created slave ship and, with the help of virtual reality technology, ponder what it might be like to lie in your own excrement for three months while you are transported thousands of miles from home to a place you have never seen but where you will live for the rest of your life as human chattel.

And that's only the beginning, for there are 380 or so years of the history of slavery in America to see. Yes, alongside the resort pleasures of sylvan Virginia, Wilder wants to create a monument to the most painful, prolonged saga in American history. It will be called the National Slavery Museum at Fredericksburg. Last month, Wilder pledged that some portion of the museum will be open in 2003.... Continued

Issue of Jan. 11 - 17, 2002

News and Features

  • Mall and Chains
    Visit Celebrate Virginia, your summer playground for golf, shopping, and slavery!
    Cover Story
  • The Chair's Fair Share
    Linda Cropp's salary hike is running a bit ahead of inflation.
    The City
  • Wet Behind the Arrears
    An Anacostia landlord claims he needs some help from his tenants to pay the water bill.
    The City
  • It's Up to You, New York Avenue
    The strip where District drivers end up in construction hell
    The City
  • The Polluted Plain
    While many D.C. neighborhoods field proposals for condo developments and strip malls, Southeast's D.C. Village invites dumps, prisoners, and the homeless.
    The City
  • Wake and Bake
    The Mail
  • One-Hit Wonder
    The Mail
  • Who's Got the Kind?
    The Mail

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  • Transcribin' and Decipherin' the Blues
    Fifty years ago, local music fanatics Dick Spottswood and John Fahey decided that Charley Patton was the best bluesman on earth. Now they're proving it to the rest of the world with a six-pound box set.
    Arts
  • Time Exposure
    Artifacts
  • Major Technicalities
    Artifacts

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