Toronto Star

Richmond removes statue of Confederat­e general

‘We have needed to turn page for decades,’ says mayor of Virginia capital

- AIMEE ORTIZ

One hundred fifty-five years after Robert E. Lee surrendere­d, the former capital of the Confederac­y is re-examining the painful legacy that it publicly memorializ­ed on Monument Avenue.

The former capital, Richmond, Va., took down a statue of the Confederat­e general Stonewall Jackson on Wednesday after Mayor Levar Stoney used emergency powers to order its immediate removal, along with other Confederat­e statues on city property. A statue of Matthew Fontaine Maury, a Confederat­e naval officer and oceanograp­her, was removed Thursday as a crowd of people watched.

Stoney said in a video statement that his order was to “expedite the healing process for the city” as well as for public safety, after other statues had been torn down by protesters.

“We have needed to turn this page for decades,” he said.

As part of the nationwide racial upheaval after George Floyd was killed by the Minneapoli­s police, symbols of the Confederac­y have been targeted by local government­s and demonstrat­ors.

In Richmond alone, people have toppled a Jefferson Davis statue; thrown one of Christophe­r Columbus into a lake; toppled the Howitzers Monument, which featured a Confederat­e artillerym­an; and torn down a statue of William Carter Wickham, a Confederat­e general.

The Maury statue, titled

“Pathfinder of the Seas,” depicts him seated below a globe. A U.S. congressma­n called last month for a hall honouring Maury at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., to be renamed.

Stoney said the removal process would take several days and they would be kept in storage until the community decides their ultimate fate.

Until recently, there were six statues on Monument Avenue: Maury, Davis, Jackson, Lee, Confederat­e army officer J.E.B. Stuart and Black tennis great Arthur Ashe, who was added in 1996 in an effort to balance the avenue.

With the city’s removal of

Jackson and Maury, and protesters’ toppling of Davis last month, Stuart and Lee are the last Confederat­e figures remaining.

Gov. Ralph Northam has ordered the removal of the Lee statue, which sits on state property in Richmond, but the process has stalled because of several lawsuits, The Associated Press reported.

Stoney, who is Black, said Richmond had been burdened with the legacy of the Confederac­y since the end of its tenure as its capital city.

“The great weight of that burden has fallen on our residents of colour,” he said, adding that it

“also placed a weight on all of our brothers and sisters who saw the unmet potential for Richmond to become an internatio­nal example of a diverse, compassion­ate and inclusive community.”

Although the removal of the Stonewall Jackson statue was announced suddenly, crowds began to form shortly after a crane appeared on the street nearby.

After about four hours, the statue was finally hoisted into the air.

“Everybody’s like screaming and clapping and yelling,” said Paul Finch, 29, a graduate student at Virginia Commonweal­th University, who was on a friend’s porch overlookin­g the scene when the process began.

Virginia had more than 220 public memorials to the Confederac­y, according to the governor’s office. A state law that went into effect Wednesday gives local government­s the ability “to remove, relocate, or contextual­ize the monuments in their communitie­s.”

“These monuments tell a particular version of history that doesn’t include everyone,” Northam said when he signed the legislatio­n in April. “In Virginia, that version of history has been given prominence and authority for far too long.”

 ?? RYAN M. KELLY AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The statue of Stonewall Jackson is one of five taken down in Richmond in recent weeks. Christophe­r Columbus’s was another.
RYAN M. KELLY AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES The statue of Stonewall Jackson is one of five taken down in Richmond in recent weeks. Christophe­r Columbus’s was another.

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