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Museum sought on National Mall

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A presidential commission has recommended building a National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., and its congressional backers plan to introduce legislation next week to turn the long-envisioned project into a reality.

Congress first approved such a museum in 1929, but it fell victim to the Great Depression. The commission’s plan envisions a 350,000-square-foot facility affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution, costing up to $350 million, with an opening date of 2011.

Candice Tolliver, a spokeswoman for Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), said Thursday that he and Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) will introduce House and Senate bills next week proposing that the federal government pick up 75% of the cost, with the rest to be raised from private donors. Tolliver said that this public-private split would be the same as the funding breakdown for the Native American History Museum currently under construction in the capital.

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Lewis, who wants the project speeded up so it can open well before 2011, sees a museum dedicated to telling the story of the African American experience as essential to a broader understanding of the nation as a whole.

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Mike Boehm

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