Thanks, I have visited. I'm good. |
Well, my Jewish MIL from New York (whose grandparents died in the holocaust) was DYING for DH and I to have a plantation wedding in the south where my family lives. She thought it would be "so charming". I said no because I thought it was weird to have a wedding where so many people suffered. We did have the reception at a historic mansion. I still have mixed feelings about that. |
It does seem icky, now that I think about it. I certainly wouldn't want to have my own wedding in that type of setting.
On the other hand, I imagine for a lot of these venues it brings in revenue that is important for historical preservation of the sites? |
I don't know if we had a regular tour, but when I chaperoned my 1st grader's field trip there, they absolutely said that Washington had over 150 slaves who did the work to make the plantation run. |
Huh? Outside of the house tour, almost all the outbuildings are slaves' quarters or work buildings. Are you sure that you've been to Mt Vernon? |
There's a difference between touring Mount Vernon to learn about the history and celebrating your wedding there or at another plantation.
I would personally never do it. |
So is a slave ship. Good spot for a wedding? |
Seriously -- They have a whole exhibit about the slaves he owned and the conditions in which they worked. Now the plantation we visited outside Charleston was very different and we left regretting giving them money because they told us the slaves had good lives there ... |
If you were offered Mt Vernon as a place to have your wedding, you'd turn it down? It's a lovely house (although maybe impractical for a wedding), the grounds are lovely. The history is fascinating, slaves and all. |
As PPs have also said, or a concentration camp. You might as well look for the site of a mass slaughter, or where a ship or plane was bombed? Would you have a wedding at the 9/11 memorials? |
Yes I would. |
+1 from a white woman. I can't fathom doing this. Seriously, OP, ask yourself if a black couple would do this. You know the answer is no for them, and it should be no for you, too. |
The place isn't evil. As long as it's a respectful place, with a place of honor/acknowledgement of wrongs, I don't see the issue.
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It varied so much by region and even house-by-house, but the Carolinas were not known as places where slaves were treated somewhat similarly to other servants, as some regions did. Typically much worse. |
Thanks for your thoughts. It's DH and me. |