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Design of the $322,000
Crossing of the Dan exhibit to be installed at The Prizery is
nearing completion. It's time to proceed with the construction and
installation. But moving ahead will take more money.
South Boston Town
Council came to the project's rescue Monday, moving $13,500 from the
Crossing of the Dan Economic Development line item to the Crossing
of the Dan Grant line item.
The infusion of cash
will be used to complete the narratives and graphic design for the
exhibit by December, according to South Boston Town Manager Ted
Daniel.
Barbara Bass, president
of the Halifax County Historical Society, said the exhibit committee
in cooperation with the town has raised $92,000 for the exhibit.
Several grant proposals for the construction and installation phase
are under evaluation by funding agencies and other proposals are
being prepared.
"This is probably the
most important thing we will do in this community for a long time
and the benefit will be in both economic development and the sharing
of an important story of the American Revolution in the South," Bass
said.
"We can't have anything
less professional than the exhibits at Guilford Courthouse and
Yorktown. This will be a lasting exhibit on the par with a national
park."
The Crossing of the Dan
exhibit will depict a turning point in the American Revolution, Gen.
Nathanael Greene's crossing of the swollen Dan River at South
Boston. Greene used all
available boats to make the crossing, leaving the pursuing British
under Gen. Charles Cornwallis stranded on the south side. Cornwallis
was forced to retreat south to resupply.
The strategic action by
Greene, known as The Race to the Dan, played a central role in
setting up the defeat of the British at Yorktown.
"If Gen. Greene had not
been able to stop Cornwallis, he would have gone right across and
taken Washington's army, and you and I would have been drinking tea
this afternoon," Bass said.
In October, Bass asked
Halifax County for $50,000. She acknowledged she may have come on
too strong in her pitch last month to the county supervisors.
Bass, however, has at
least three reasons for the urgency of her appeal for funds:
She wants to share
the seldom-told story of the historic crossing with the region and
the world.
She's in a race to
complete funding and installation of the exhibit in 2007 in order to
capitalize on statewide tourist promotion of the 2007 anniversary of
the founding of the Jamestown settlement.
She's crunched the
numbers and believes that the $322,000 exhibit can have a
significant economic impact on the area.
Bass bases her economic
impact projections on the impact a similar project at Guilford
Courthouse, where Cornwallis' army was severely wounded before the
final defeat at Yorktown. Guilford Courthouse has an exhibit planned
by Fruland & Bowles and created by Project Arts and Ideas, the
firms responsible for the South Boston exhibit.
She said the Guilford
Courthouse exhibit in 2003 drew half a million visitors, generated
more than $23 million in income to shops, restaurants and other
businesses in the community, and generated 604 full- and part-time
jobs.
"If we do 10 percent of
that, we will bring in 50,000 people," Bass said.
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