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Last Updated 07:00 AM EST January 07, 2009


The Fredericksburg Area Museum and Cultural Center

On December 11, 1862, Gen. Ambrose Burnside’s Union artillery reigned down 100 shells a minute for two hours on the small town of Fredericksburg, Virginia, destroying or heavily damaging every structure and killing 100 people. Despite such horrific damage, Fredericksburg held on, limping through three years of war and the several difficult decades of reconstruction. From the ashes rose a center of trade and industry: today, the town of 19,000 people draws a substantial source of its income from tourists who come to learn about its history. And on December 6, 2008, that just got easier. Nearly one and a half centuries after the bombardment, the Fredericksburg Area Museum and Cultural Center has more than doubled its exhibition space, opening the 19,500-square-foot Catherine W. Jones McKann Center on Princess Anne Street, which celebrates Fredericksburg’s 300-year past, from its humble beginning as a tobacco inspection station through some of the most turbulent years in American history.

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Today in History
January 7

1955: Marian Anderson makes her debut with the Metropolitan Opera.

1927: The first commercial translatlantic telephone service begins, connecting New York and London.

1926: The comedians George Burns and Gracie Allen are married.

1896: Fannie Farmer publishes her first cookbook.

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The Big 3 U.S. automakers have asked Congress for a combined $34 billion bailout. What are your thoughts?
Thousands of jobs are at stake. Congress must save the industry!
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Quote of the Day
January 7

"Am I not destroying my enemies when I make friends of them?"

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