The Peterborough Examiner

Panel axes bid to yank Confederat­e’s bust from state capitol

- ERIK SCHELZIG

NASHVILLE — A bid by Tennessee’s governor to remove a bust of Confederat­e cavalry general, slave trader and early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest from the state capitol building was rejected Friday.

The state capitol Commission voted 7-5 against issuing a petition to moving the bust from the Capitol to the new state museum being built nearby. It would have been the first step in a lengthy process laid out by Tennessee’s “Heritage Protection Act” that limits the removal or changing of historical memorials on public property.

Republican Gov. Bill Haslam called for the removal after last month’s deadly white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., He had previously called for removing it after the 2015 slayings of nine black churchgoer­s in Charleston, South Carolina.

Finance Commission­er Larry Martin sponsored the proposal to move the bust.

“The Civil War, and Tennessee’s role in it, is part of our history. It needs to be recognized and understood, but not celebrated,” he said. “The Tennessee state capitol building should be a place that represents a united Tennessee rather than a divided one.”

Haslam spokeswoma­n Jennifer Donnals said the governor was “very disappoint­ed” by Friday’s decision.

Forrest amassed a fortune as a plantation owner and slave trader in Memphis before enlisting. State lawmakers voted to place his bust in the Capitol more than a century after the Civil War ended.

Comptrolle­r Justin Wilson spoke out against the unelected panel overruling the Legislatur­e’s vote in 1973 to place the bust in the Capitol.

“That resolution very clearly showed an intent from the General Assembly to have Gen. Forrest placed where he is now,” said Wilson, who was elected by the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e. “I am concerned about this commission — while we have the power to reverse the action of the General Assembly — exercising that power.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? A statue of Confederat­e Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest sits in a park in Memphis, Tenn. A panel voted to keep the statue in the park.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES A statue of Confederat­e Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest sits in a park in Memphis, Tenn. A panel voted to keep the statue in the park.

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