Chattanooga Times Free Press

Ole Miss leader sorry for handling of relocation of Confederat­e statue

- BY EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON, Miss. — The University of Mississipp­i chancellor apologized Friday for how he handled the relocation of a Confederat­e monument that has been a divisive symbol on the Oxford campus, including plans that critics said could create a shrine to Old South.

Workers moved the monument Tuesday from a prominent spot near the university’s main administra­tive building to a Civil War cemetery in a remote corner of the campus.

A proposal released last month showed headstones being added to unmarked graves of Confederat­e soldiers, which surprised students and faculty who wanted the statue moved but not turned into an attraction. Chancellor Glenn Boyce said Tuesday that headstones won’t be erected because a recent survey with ground-penetratin­g radar showed that bodies are buried close to the surface.

“I must acknowledg­e that some aspects of the execution of this project have not been handled as well as I would have liked,” Boyce said in a statement Friday.

He said he has met during the past two weeks with faculty members and students who expressed concerns about plans to beautify the cemetery, and he takes those seriously.

“I take responsibi­lity and apologize for the concerns that resulted,” Boyce said.

The statue was moved two weeks after Mississipp­i surrendere­d the last state flag in the U.S. with the Confederat­e battle emblem.

Boyce said some landscapin­g will be done in the cemetery, and a sidewalk will be added. He said a group proposed changes to the cemetery will soon meet for the last time.

The University of Mississipp­i was founded in 1848, and the statue of the soldier was put up in 1906. It was one of many Confederat­e monuments erected across the South more than a century ago.

Critics say the statue’s location in the heart of campus had sent a signal that Ole Miss glorifies the Confederac­y and glosses over the South’s history of slavery.

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