UPDATE: Following a lengthy tenure in Sugar Land, Texas, the Museum of Southern History, is relocating to the campus of Houston Baptist University in the summer of 2007, joining the Bible in America Museum and Museum of Decorative Arts and Architecture in the new Joella & Stewart Morris Cultural Arts Center. Maps and directions from Highway 59-S to that site may be obtained through the university web (www.hbu.edu), or by calling 281-649-3000.
In the late 1970s, museum benefactor Joella Morris cast about for
some means to help preserve the history of Ft. Bend County by working
to save the old jail in Richmond, Texas. That accomplished, she
set her sights upon preserving artifacts and memorabilia on The
War Between the States, and established a museum in which to display
these materials. A 1978 Corporate agreement evolved into The Confederate
Museum, which had its own building just outside Richmond, until
1997 that is, when it was relocated into a new building on the campus
of Southern National Bank in Sugar Land, Texas. In this suburban
community on the outskirts of Houston, the museum operated to entertain
and educate patrons, continuing to acquire and display objects relating
primarily to nineteenth century subjects. Now a new home has been
constructed to house the museum's growing collections and increasing
number of visitors.
Throughout 2001-2, an impressive building patterned after Thomas
Jefferson's retreat of Poplar Forest, went up, and during the summer
of '02, the museum began to move into its new premises. The two
story brick structure was not only modeled after Jefferson's home,
but impressively landscaped and a small sharecropper's home was
situated on a nearby tract.
The permanent exhibits on the upper floor chronicle the antebellum
history of the south, the coming of an Un-Civil War, the tragic
events that composed that drama, and the effects upon generations
of southern society. Visitors peruse cases and dioramas, viewing
clothing, fine furnishings, uniforms, tools, and weapons that help
convey a sense of who settled the region and how they altered their
world to make it a prosperous area, and developed their unique social
values.
So, come join us as we provide visitors with an opportunity to
"discover" yourself through that collective past.
Museum Tour
Come with us and take
a trip back through history as we give you a virtual
tour of The Museum.