File #: 21-0972    Name: Memorandum of Understanding between the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and the City of Alexandria
Type: Other Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 4/14/2021 In control: City Council Legislative Meeting
On agenda: 5/11/2021 Final action:
Title: Consideration of a Memorandum of Understanding between the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and the City of Alexandria related to $2.443 million in Grant Funds to Preserve and Rehabilitate the Freedom House Museum (1315 Duke Street).
Attachments: 1. 21-0972_Attachment 1_GA Grants MOU - Alexandria_FINAL-04-13-2021, 2. 21-0972_Attachment 2_1315 Duke Street Budget Request January 2020
City of Alexandria, Virginia
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MEMORANDUM



DATE: MAY 5, 2021

TO: THE HONORABLE MAYOR AND MEMBERS OF CITY COUNCIL

FROM: MARK B. JINKS, CITY MANAGER /s/

DOCKET TITLE:
TITLE
Consideration of a Memorandum of Understanding between the Virginia Department of Historic Resources and the City of Alexandria related to $2.443 million in Grant Funds to Preserve and Rehabilitate the Freedom House Museum (1315 Duke Street).
BODY
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ISSUE: Execution of a grant agreement.

RECOMMENDATION: That City Council authorize the City Manager to execute a Memorandum of Understanding related to a $2.443 million grant to preserve and rehabilitate the Freedom House Museum (Attachment 1) between the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (DHR) and the City of Alexandria.

BACKGROUND: On March 25, 2020, the City of Alexandria purchased the National Historic Landmark known as the Franklin and Armfield Office. Residents and visitors to Alexandria pass by this site at 1315 Duke Street, unaware of its chilling past. It was once the Alexandria Slave Pen where thousands of enslaved men, women, and children were purchased locally, held, and sold for a large profit to plantations in the Deep South. This four-story brick building, while heavily modified, is the only portion of this slave pen complex that remains. It is one of the few remaining buildings used for slave trading in the United States. The City of Alexandria, through the Office of Historic Alexandria (OHA), plans to restore the building and create an expanded museum dedicated to the interpretation of the domestic slave trade - the second phase in the evolution of slavery in America.

Acquisition of the property by the City ensured the long-term ownership of the building as a public museum, held for the public trust, accessible to the public, and preserved to recall a painful but important era of national, Virginia, and City history. This is an im...

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