Delta Blues
Advisory
October 28, 2014
CIVIL RIGHTS "FREEDOM RIDER" THOMAS ARMSTRONG
AT DELTA BLUES MUSEUM
CLARKSDALE, MISSISSIPPI
Mississippi's Oldest Music Museum
to Host Co-author and Civil Rights Scholar
WHAT:
The
Delta Blues Museum will host Armstrong in a presentation
of a Autobiography
of a Freedom Rider: My Life as a Foot Soldier for Civil
Rights. From Armstrong, "Simply said, AUTOBIOGRAPHY
OF A FREEDOM RIDER: My Life as a Foot Soldier for Civil
Rights is a model for personal empowerment through civic
engagement, and furthering the realization of America's
democratic ideals. The memoir is based on my telling of
my own experience in the early civil rights movement in
my native Mississippi (1958-1963)."
A Q&A and booksigning will follow. Open
to the media and to the public--event sponsored
by the Mississippi Arts Commission and the National
Endowment for the Arts.
WHERE:
Delta Blues Museum,
#1 Blues Alley Lane, Clarksdale, Mississippi
WHEN:
Saturday, November
1, 2014 at 2:00pm
About the Delta
Blues Museum
A 2013 recipient of the National Medal for Museum
and Library Services--the nation's highest honor for museum
and library service to the community--the Delta Blues Museum
is dedicated to creating a welcoming place where visitors
find meaning, value and perspective by exploring the history
and heritage of the unique American musical art form, the
Blues. The museum seeks $1.2 million for new and
enhanced exhibits for its expansion, including the Muddy
Waters Addition. Expanded exhibits will enable the cultural
organization to better preserve and display the history
and work of blues artists from the Mississippi Delta, and
advance the Museum's ability to "tell" stories that inspire
and educate future generations about this important American
art form.
For online donations or for more information on events or programs, please call (662) 627-6820, or visit the Museum web site at www.deltabluesmuseum.org.
Members of the press may register on the Museum website to access the PRESS
ROOM for further information, images and materials.
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This newsletter is supported in part
by funding from the Mississippi Arts Commission, a state
agency, and,
in part, from the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal
agency.
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