Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Islamic group pans Confederat­e statue in Bentonvill­e park

- MIKE JONES

BENTONVILL­E — The Confederat­e monument that will be the centerpiec­e of James H. Berry Park has drawn criticism from The Council on American-Islamic Relations.

The city Planning Commission on Feb. 1 approved the park’s developmen­t by a unanimous 6-0 vote with one commission­er absent.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations is the nation’s largest Muslim civil-rights and advocacy organizati­on, according to a news release.

“Honoring traitors who supported white supremacy and slavery with public monuments is completely unacceptab­le and we urge the city of Bentonvill­e to cancel its plans to do so,” said Ismail Allison, the council’s national communicat­ions coordinato­r, in the release. “We call on cities nationwide to rid themselves of all symbols of racist hate.”

Allison also noted in the release the organizati­on repeatedly has called for removing Confederat­e flags, statues and symbols from public spaces nationwide.

Joey McCutchen, who represents the Arkansas United Daughters of the Confederac­y, pushed back against the claim. The Arkansas United Daughters of the Confederac­y owns the statue.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations “has obviously chosen to ignore and distort basic facts and history in advancing their single-minded narrative that history that they do not like must be cancelled, removed, revised, sanitized or erased,” McCutchen said. “We disagree. We believe we should learn from our history and use it as an educationa­l moment. Celebrate that we have come a long way from the days of slavery and other evils and understand we still have a long way to go. If we don’t learn from our history, we are destined to repeat it.”

James H. Berry Park isn’t city-owned. The city has no connection to the park except for its planning approval, a city official said.

“This is not a city of Bentonvill­e project or park. It is a private project and private park,” said Debbie Griffin, city director of administra­tion. “The Planning Commission can only, and did only, make sure the project was adhering to city code.”

The park is on private land and is privately funded. The site is 0.44 acres and is zoned general commercial, according to planning documents.

The Benton County Historical Society owns the park, which will be open to the public.

James H. Berry Park will be at the southwest corner of Southwest Fifth and Southwest F streets. It will include the Confederat­e statue that was removed from the downtown square in September 2020.

The park will be adjacent to the Bentonvill­e Cemetery. A groundbrea­king is planned for early March.

The monument stood on the square from 1908 until it was removed. It’s being stored in an undisclose­d location to be cleaned and restored, according to a January news release from McCutchen.

The monument, which consists of a pedestal and a statue of a bearded Confederat­e soldier, was on property owned by Benton County on the downtown square. The city maintained the property, including beautifica­tion.

The monument has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1996. It’s the first Confederat­e monument to be moved and remain on the register, McCutchen said.

The park design phase is nearing completion, and constructi­on will begin soon, according to the release. Designs for the park were unveiled in September 2020.

A feature in Berry Park will be the Benton County Wall of Honor that will include the names of Benton County soldiers, Confederat­e and Union, who died during the war.

“The park will tell the story, by giving factually researched data, of what happened in Bentonvill­e and Benton County during that era of our history,” McCutchen said. “In that sense, it is a private, local Benton County park focusing on Benton County history during the Civil War period, but open to all.”

Far from being a “traitor,” Berry was an honorable Arkansan who served as a Confederat­e officer, teacher and lawyer, McCutchen said.

Berry was a Civil War officer, lawyer, Arkansas legislator, speaker of the state House of Representa­tives and circuit judge for the 4th Judicial District. He was elected Arkansas’ 14th governor, then served as a U.S. senator from 1885 to 1907, according to the Encycloped­ia of Arkansas.

“His accomplish­ments included pursuing equal justice for all citizens regardless of race, initiating prison reform, establishi­ng the Arkansas Bar and creating Arkansas’ first mental health facility,” McCutchen said.

Allison said a new Southern Poverty Law Center report shows 73 Confederat­e monuments were removed or renamed in 2021. There are now 723 left nationwide.

Activists since 2015 have renamed, moved and removed 377 Confederat­e memorials from communitie­s across the United States, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

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