Ohio history museum plans 2nd ‘Controversy’ show (AP)

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio’s history museum is planning a sequel to last year’s exhibit of provocative items that included the state’s old electric chair and a Ku Klux Klan robe, this time focusing on stereotypes and race.

Starting Feb. 29, the Ohio Historical Center in Columbus will display a Nazi flag captured in Germany by a Cleveland soldier in 1945, more than a dozen late 19th century Currier Ives prints with caricatures of blacks, and a 1940s Cleveland Indians jacket with an emblem of the “Chief Wahoo” mascot as part of a small exhibit called “Controversy 2: Pieces We Don’t Normally Talk About.”

Last year’s exhibit, which ran for eight months, was titled “Controversy: Pieces You Don’t Normally See.” The new display will include only limited information about the featured items to encourage viewers to form their own interpretations and opinions, just as the last one did.

It’s a break from history museums’ typical practice of providing more thorough context for exhibits, said Mark Holbrook, the Ohio Historical Society’s marketing manager.

“To let the visitors bring their own context to it is something new, but we found that it’s something people appreciate,” he said.

Nearly 6,000 people viewed the first exhibit, which cost $5

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