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Donor wants slavery artifacts back

SUFFOLK, Va., April 12 (UPI) -- A Virginia man is trying to trace artifacts he donated to a proposed museum of slavery in 2004.

Therbia Parker of Suffolk estimates the value of the items at $75,000, The (Norfolk) Virginian-Pilot reported Tuesday. He said it included an 1850 bill of sale for two slaves -- a girl and child -- a slave collar and a first edition copy of "Uncle Tom's Cabin."

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Douglas Wilder, the first black state governor since the Reconstruction era, proposed the National Slavery Museum in 1993, selecting a site in Fredericksburg. Wilder still says the museum will be built.

But Parker says the non-profit group backing the museum has been dissolved, the group owes Fredericksburg thousands of dollars for taxes and an engineering firm has a lien on the land.

Parker still has a large collection at his house from the slave era that ended with the Civil War and the Jim Crow era that followed it. Some of the more disturbing items include a blood-spattered Ku Klux Klan robe and a set of slave shackles.

"The worst thing you can do about history is deny it," Parker said. "My wife and I wanted them to be in a place where the public can view them, where they can be used as an educational tool. I didn't collect all this for all these years for me. This wasn't for me. It wasn't for Doug Wilder either."

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Parker also distrusts Wilder's promise that his artifacts are in safe storage.

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