National Great Blacks In Wax Museum

The National Great Blacks in Wax Museum is a wax museum in Baltimore, Maryland featuring prominent African-American and other black historical figures. It was established in 1983, in a downtown storefront on Saratoga Street.[1]

The museum is currently located on 1601 East North Avenue in a renovated firehouse, a Victorian Mansion, and two former apartment dwellings that provide nearly 30,000 square feet (3,000 m2) of exhibit and office space. The exhibits feature over 100 wax figures and scenes, including: a full model slave ship exhibit which portrays the 400-year history of the Atlantic Slave Trade, an exhibit on the role of youth in making history, and a Maryland room highlighting the contributions to African American history by notable Marylanders.[2] The museum's co-founder, Dr. Joanne Martin, describes the importance of preserving Black history in this way, stating: 'everything else, it seems like a movie if you don't have a sense of exactly what people were fighting against.'[3]

  1. ^ "National Great Blacks In Wax Museum". www.greatblacksinwax.org. Retrieved 2019-05-20.
  2. ^ "National Great Blacks In Wax Museum". www.greatblacksinwax.org. Retrieved 2019-05-20.
  3. ^ "B.A. Parker, This American Life Episode 627: 'Suitable for Children: History is Not a Toy (Act Two)' National Public Radio (6 October 2017)".