In January, hundreds of oral histories, manuscripts, book collections and historical archives of Black Mississippians collected by the Margaret Walker Center at Jackson State University will go into a temperature controlled storage during renovations of its campus home, Ayer Hall, which is also the oldest building on the campus.
The federal funds covering the cost of the move came through this fall, but for several months earlier this year, it was unclear whether that would happen.
In 2023, a severe storm damaged Ayer Hall’s HVAC system and a few floors where many of the center’s archives and cultural artifacts are stored. In November 2024, the Margaret Walker Center staff applied for a $317,039 federal grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services to cover relocating the historic materials while Ayer Hall is renovated. IMLS is a small federal agency that supports museums, libraries and cultural institutions across the country.
Then in March, President Donald Trump issued an executive order requiring the IMLS and other federal agencies to scale down to “the minimum presence.” At IMLS, nearly 70 employees were placed on administrative leave at the small federal agency, which supports museums, libraries and cultural institutions across the country.
When the IMLS team was placed on leave, the Margaret Walker Center staff was left in limbo about their grant. After nearly six months of uncertainty, the center received its IMLS grant in September.
“We couldn’t be more grateful,” said Angela Stewart, an archivist at the center.
The Margaret Walker Center funding will also help cover the cost of professional development workshops with a focus on boosting museum operations and management.
The Margaret Walker Center is seen at Jackson State University on Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi TodayMaintaining cultural institutions like the Margaret Walker Center requires funding that goes beyond the price of admission or local tax dollars, said Sen. Hillam Frazier, a Democrat from Jackson and a 1974 JSU alumnus. In states like Mississippi, where access to resources and support for cultural institutions may be meager, funding has been essential in preserving state history, he said.
“It is a godsend to get this money, the tools and resources for an institution like the Margaret Walker Center at Jackson State,” Frazier said. “Museums and libraries are sometimes the only access to education that people may have where they can further explore their curiosity and areas of interests, as well as know their history.”
The importance of the history
After the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, Margert Walker Alexander, an accomplished poet and writer, founded the Institute for the Study of the History, Life, and Culture of Black People at what was then Jackson State College.
At the time, universities and colleges across the country were adding Black history departments, courses and programs to their curriculum as a result of student activism from the Civil Rights and Black Power movements.
U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, who knew Walker and attended Tougaloo College in the 1970s with her son Sigismund Walker Alexander, remembers admiring her “spirit and commitment to writing about Black people and Black life in the Deep South.” Walker was a pivotal figure in the movement to establish Black intellectual and academic studies, he said.
“She aspired for the institute to reflect her passion as an academic, artist and activist, and the university commended her preservation efforts,” said Thompson, a 1972 JSU alumnus.
When Walker retired in 1979 after 30 years as an English professor at Jackson State, the university honored her by renaming the cultural center after her.
The center is also home to important collections and memorabilia from notable Black Mississippians such as a collection from William Lamson an architect and analyst for court cases dealing with school desegregation, voting rights, housing discrimination and judicial redistricting. Another example is a collection from Rod Paige, the first Black U.S. secretary of education who was also an interim president of JSU, That collection includes memoranda, reports, speeches, scrapbooks and papers reflecting on Paige’s role during George W. Bush’s presidency. Paige died Dec. 9.
“There’s so much history of Black people in Mississippi that is in danger of being lost, so it’s important to keep funding and supporting these institutions to preserve her legacy but also the works associated with it,” Thompson said.
Stewart, the archivist, said it was important to Walker to provide space for people to “learn how to think and be curious” rather than being told how to think. The importance of preserving archival work at the center helps engage visitors and students in research, scholarship and history.
“We have to know who we are and where we’re going,” Stewart said. “That’s the importance of history. And archives do that.”
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