Civil War anniversary to bring tourism dollars

Marketplace Staff Feb 19, 2011
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Civil War anniversary to bring tourism dollars

Marketplace Staff Feb 19, 2011
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JEREMY HOBSON: This year marks 150 years since the start of the Civil War.

And as Rickey Bevington reports from Georgia Public Broadcasting, some recession-scarred but history-filled communities are using the anniversary as a tourism opportunity.


RICKEY BEVINGTON: In the small town of Milledgeville, the former state capitol of Georgia, politicians debate whether to leave the United States.

RE-ENACTOR: Shall the people of Georgia secede from the Union in consequence of the election of Mr. Lincoln to the presidency of the United States?

This is one of many re-enactments celebrating the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. In states from Maryland to Texas, museums, historical sites — not to mention hotels, restaurants and gas stations — want to draw the business of heritage tourists.

LAURA MANDALA: It’s a $192 billion business.

Tourism market researcher Laura Mandala says Americans who plan vacations to cultural and historic sites spend an average of $994 a trip. That’s a third more than the average leisure vacationer.

MANDALA: I know souvenirs is the number two category of purchase. You know shopping’s number one.

Mandala says 80 percent of heritage tourists plan their trips online, so that’s where communities with a historic past are working to get their attention.

I’ve logged on to the website of the Georgia Historical Society. I’m typing in the Civil War topic I’m interested in — Sherman’s “March to the Sea” — and up pops a map with driving directions. It even has suggestions for hotels and restaurants.

DAVID BLIGHT: We’ve made history sites into commercial sites for actually centuries now.

Yale University American history professor Dr. David Blight is an author of the upcoming Civil War website by the National Park Service. The federal government oversees 70 Civil War historic sites and battlefields and they attract up to 12 million visitors a year. But so many tourists, Blight says, creates what he calls a dilemma between commemorating history and making money off of it.

BLIGHT: No one can drive into Gettysburg without seeing 50 billboards on the way in.

And since maintaining historic sites isn’t cheap, making the past part of a billion-dollar market may be the best way to preserve it.

In Atlanta, I’m Rickey Bevington for Marketplace.

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