Shockoe Institute opens in Richmond to examine slavery's legacy
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Summary
The PBS NewsHour segment profiles the newly opened Shockoe Institute in Richmond, Virginia, part of its Art in Action series. It covers student tours of the 'Expanding Freedom' exhibit, details on the domestic slave trade, the institute's location in the former Main Street Station, and its $11 million Mellon Foundation funding. The second paragraph notes sourcing from institute president Marlon Buckner, historian Greg Kimball, and visitor reactions, with plans for future symposia and programming.
Editorial Assessment
The report accurately describes the institute's exhibits, historical context, and mission using on-site footage and named experts. Viewer perception may be shaped by the emphasis on linking past decisions to present civic questions without equivalent discussion of counter-narratives or debates over historical interpretation. Economic and legal details, such as Virginia's 1705 statutes and the scale of the domestic trade, are corroborated by established records. The piece is transparent about Mellon funding its own parent organization. Missing are broader visitor demographics or external scholarly critiques of the interpretive approach.
Key Moments
Shockoe Institute opened this spring in Richmond's Main Street Station with 'Expanding Freedom' exhibit
Opened April 2026; confirmed by multiple local news outlets and institute site
$11 million grant from the Mellon Foundation funded the institute
Mellon Foundation announced the grant in 2022; institute materials and city reports confirm
Nearly 1 million enslaved Americans moved from Upper to Lower South via domestic slave trade
Standard historical estimate from primary records and scholarship on the Second Middle Passage
Virginia 1705 law was first to explicitly tie slavery to race
Virginia Slave Codes of 1705 established hereditary racial slavery; widely documented in colonial statutes
Sources Consulted
- Visit Shockoe Institute
- Shockoe Institute | Discover History, Promote Change
- Shockoe Institute opens interactive center at Main Street Station
- Shockoe Institute opens, confronting Richmond's role in slavery
- Shockoe Institute's 'Expanding Freedom' exhibit explores slavery's roots, Richmond's role
- The Shockoe Project
- Shockoe Institute's Exhibit: Expanding Freedom
- The Shockoe Project Home
- Virginia Slave Code (1705)
- "An act concerning Servants and Slaves" (1705)
- The Transatlantic Slave Trade and the Middle Passage
- Shockoe Institute breaks ground for new center in Richmond