Bessie is an animatronic cow that greets visitors to the Billy Graham Library. Seriously.
She has the Southern twang and low, sugary voice of an old black woman (an early voice over was determined to be “too Yankee”) and serves to draw kids into the experience. Bessie talks with pride of young ‘Billy Frank’ and emphasizes how God used Billy Graham. She also urges kids to take a quiz and exchange it for a prize at the end of the tour.
Dedicated on May 31, 2007 with a crowd of dignitaries and former U.S. presidents,the Billy Graham Library is a vital stop on any Billy Graham pilgrimage tour. Located next to the BGEA headquarters, the Library is part museum, part memorial and part on-going crusade. But that’s not how the BGEA would prefer to describe it.
“The new Library will not be a memorial to Billy Graham,” said BGEA board member Graeme Keith. “Nor will it be a museum. It will be a ministry that we believe will touch and change the lives of thousands of people in the years ahead as they visit this facility.”
Though the memorial aspect of the Billy Graham Library is hard to miss, especially since Graham’s wife, Ruth Bell Graham, is buried at the Library and Graham himself will be buried next to her when he dies. Ruth Graham had reservations about being buried at the Library, calling it a “circus” and a “tourist attraction,” before apparently relenting and agreeing to be buried there.
The Billy Graham Library is a tourist attraction in Charlotte, N.C., dedicated to the lanky evangelist who has spread the gospel throughout the world.
Wait, no. That’s not right. It’s dedicated to that gospel message, not the lanky evangelist who the Library is named for. Hmm. Suffice it to say, the barn-shaped not-a-museum has its share of controversy.
But the attraction itself tells the story of Billy Graham and the gospel he preached. Visitors enter through a 40-foot glass cross and meet Bessie, the animatronic cow. The 40,000-foot facility covers Graham’s lifetime of ministry, from his roots in a Charlotte dairy farm (hence the cow and a theme that permeates the place) to a tent revival in Los Angeles that pushed him into national prominence, to a recreation of the Berlin Wall and his efforts to share the gospel behind the Iron Curtain.
The Library includes a gift shop and a cafe dubbed the Graham Brothers Dairy Bar. Outside the Library you can also find the grave of Graham’s late wife, Ruth Bell Graham. Nearby is Graham’s boyhood home, restored and open for tours.
What you won’t find at the Billy Graham Library is books or scholarly research. You can find that at the Billy Graham Center in Wheaton, Ill.
The Billy Graham Library is open Monday through Saturday (yep, closed on Sundays) and there is no charge for admission. The Ashville Citizen-Times offers a virtual tour of the Billy Graham Library, complete with video.
"I'm counting totally and completely on the Lord Jesus Christ, and not on Billy Graham. I'm not going to heaven because I've read the Bible, nor because I've preached to a lot of people. I'm going to heaven because of what Christ did." Learn more about Jesus > >