Wednesday, June 5, 2024

New Exhibit Explores Voting Rights in the United States and North Carolina

OLD FORT
Jun 5, 2024

A new exhibit at the Mountain Gateway Museum, "A Place at the Polls," examines the history of voting rights in the United States and how it played out in Western North Carolina. The exhibit runs through February 2025.

From the start of the nation, the question of who deserves the right to vote has been an ongoing debate. For generations, states primarily made those decisions, but wars, protests, and social changes caused the federal government to step in and create Constitutional Amendments to safeguard people’s access to their voting rights.

This exhibit examines what voting rights were nationally and in North Carolina after the Revolutionary War. Later, how various Amendments, from the 15th, which granted African American men the right to vote, to women’s suffrage through the 19th Amendment, affected the nation and N.C. The exhibit also looks at other federal laws and how they changed voter rights.

Artifacts, from voting machines to campaign buttons, will be on display. These artifacts come from the Asheville Museum of History, the Swannanoa Valley Museum, the Western Regional Archives, and the museum’s collection.

For more information about this exhibit, visit the Mountain Gateway Museum’s website at www.mgmnc.org or contact Brittany Joachim at 828-668-9259 or brittany.bennett@dncr.nc.gov.

The museum is open year-round from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and from 2-5 p.m. on Sunday; closed on Monday and state holidays. Admission is free.

About the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources
The N.C. Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (DNCR) manages, promotes, and enhances the things that people love about North Carolina – its diverse arts and culture, rich history, and spectacular natural areas. Through its programs, the department enhances education, stimulates economic development, improves public health, expands accessibility, and strengthens community resiliency.
The department manages over 100 locations across the state, including 27 historic sites, seven history museums, two art museums, five science museums, four aquariums, 35 state parks, four recreation areas, dozens of state trails and natural areas, the North Carolina Zoo, the State Library, the State Archives, the N.C. Arts Council, the African American Heritage Commission, the American Indian Heritage Commission, the State Historic Preservation Office, the Office of State Archaeology, the Highway Historical Markers program, the N.C. Land and Water Fund, and the Natural Heritage Program. For more information, please visit www.dncr.nc.gov.

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