Trump trips over African American museum's name

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the Berglund Center on September 24, 2016 in Roanoke, Virginia. PHOTO | AFP

What you need to know:

  • In fact, the long-awaited institution, which opened Saturday amid fresh racial strife in the country, is called the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
  • Trump, who has been accused of racism toward several minority groups, hailed African Americans' "incredible contributions" to the United States. "African Americans have given so much to our nation, and sacrificed so much for this nation."

ROANOKE, United States

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, who is seeking to shore up support among black voters, has stumbled over the name of the new Washington museum on African American history.

The new museum is a "really beautiful place," Trump told thousands of supporters in Roanoke, Virginia, on Saturday. He called it the "Smithsonian national museum of American history, African American art."

In fact, the long-awaited institution, which opened Saturday amid fresh racial strife in the country, is called the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Trump, who has been accused of racism toward several minority groups, hailed African Americans' "incredible contributions" to the United States.

"African Americans have given so much to our nation, and sacrificed so much for this nation."

While noting that some African Americans have been very successful, Trump acknowledged that "too many African Americans have been left behind and trapped in poverty," he said.

Trump blamed President Barack Obama's Democrats for black travails in the United States. Obama is the nation's first African American leader.

Obama earlier inaugurated the striking 400,000-square-foot (37,000-square-meter) bronze-clad museum before thousands of spectators gathered in the US capital to witness the historic opening.

African American voters largely support Trump's Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

"I will fight to make sure every single African American in this country is fully included in the American dream," Trump said.

Trump recently visited a black church in Detroit, Michigan, promising more jobs.

On Thursday, he suggested that drugs were a "very, very big factor" in sometimes violent protests in Charlotte, North Carolina after a police officer shot to death an African American man.