History for Lunch to focus on Marc Basnight

Published 5:19 pm Tuesday, March 16, 2021

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ELIZABETH CITY – The Museum of the Albemarle will host our monthly History for Lunch Hybrid (both in person and via Zoom video), on Wednesday, April 21, 2021 at 12 p.m.   Alex Gottschalk, Currituck Native, who wrote about Basnight for his UNC Senior Thesis, will discuss Basnight’s origins from a small town in an isolated region of the state, his ascent into statewide political leadership, and how he leveraged this clout to attempt to ensure that Northeast North Carolina received the connecting roads, educational opportunities, and economic improvements that we deserved

For eighteen years, Marc Basnight was president pro-tem of the North Carolina Senate. From this lofty perch at the Legislature, Basnight was at the intersection of every major moment in the last generation of North Carolina politics. The limelight that trailed Basnight could be immense, but for all that glory, the one singular item that mattered to him was helping the region that he felt the state lost for over a century. Bred by generations of hardscrabble men and women who lived off the sea, Basnight was driven to make a difference and help Dare and all of Northeast North Carolina combat what his cousin, North Carolina State Senator and Museum of the Albemarle advocate Melvin Daniels, once called, “The Curse of the Great Dismal Swamp.” For Daniels, this meant that the region “never got the jobs that count.” 

The Museum will offer the History for Lunch in-person and through Zoom. To attend in-person, visitors must RSVP by April 1 due to limited available seats in the auditorium by calling Lori Meads at 252-331-4054. This lecture will also be online: register in advance through the Museum’s Facebook page or website to receive a link through the Zoom platform to attend the lecture. 

The virtual program is supported by Southern Bank.