Albuquerque Journal

Roosevelt statue moving to North Dakota

Family OKs move, concedes depiction is ‘troubling’

- BY LEONARD GREENE

NEW YORK — The Rough Rider is mounting up and moving on.

An American Museum of Natural History statue of former President Theodore Roosevelt, which has been criticized for glorifying colonialis­m and racial discrimina­tion, is being relocated to North Dakota.

For 80 years, the Roosevelt statue stood sentry outside the museum, riding a horse and towering over an African man and a Native American man. Roosevelt’s own descendant­s conceded the depiction is “troubling” and signed off on the statue’s removal.

Now, T.R. is headed for Medora, North Dakota, where the Theodore Roosevelt Presidenti­al Library is set to open in 2026 — the 250th anniversar­y of the United States.

“We are grateful to the Theodore Roosevelt Presidenti­al Library for proposing a fitting new home for the Equestrian Statue,” said Vicki Been, the city’s deputy mayor for housing and economic developmen­t. “This long-term loan would allow an important part of the city’s art collection to be appropriat­ely contextual­ized, and we look forward to continuing to work with the library on next steps.”

Although Roosevelt was born in Manhattan and was governor of New York before running the country, his library will be built on a site near Theodore Roosevelt National Park, which preserves landscapes the pioneering conservati­onist visited between 1883 and 1887.

“The Equestrian Statue is problemati­c in its hierarchic­al depiction of its subjects and should be removed,” Theodore Roosevelt V said in a statement. “Rather than burying a troubling work of art, we ought to learn from it. It is fitting that the statue is being relocated to a place where its compositio­n can be recontextu­alized to facilitate difficult, complex and inclusive discussion­s.”

Roosevelt was a founding member of the Upper West Side museum. The nation’s 26th president is also closely associated with South Dakota, where his face is etched on Mount Rushmore, along with presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln.

The Equestrian Statue, designed by James Earle Fraser, may undergo some changes before it is put back on display, according to the library commission.

Vice President Roosevelt became the nation’s youngest president when, at the age of 46, he took over for William McKinley, who was assassinat­ed in 1901.

More than a decade earlier, during the Spanish American War, Roosevelt resigned his post as Assistant Secretary of the Navy and formed a volunteer cavalry regiment that gained notoriety as the “Rough Riders.”

The statue was vandalized with red paint in 2017. Last year, Mayor Bill de Blasio called the statue “problemati­c” amid a racial reckoning caused by the police killing of George Floyd.

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