Chattanooga Times Free Press

Black bridgebuil­der honored at Stone Mountain Park

- BY TYLER ESTEP

A century-old covered bridge at Stone Mountain Park — home of the world’s largest Confederat­e monument — is now on the National Register of Historic Places.

It was built by a Black man.

“It speaks to who they were, who we are, and more importantl­y to who we can become,” DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond said at an emotional Friday ceremony recognizin­g the bridge and its groundbrea­king builder Washington W. King.

“In this park that was built on the concept of bigotry and racism,” Thurmond said, “this bridge opens a whole new opportunit­y and panorama for us and the state to bridge the divides that have separated us. And to evolve into better people.”

The bridge — which today helps connect Robert E. Lee Boulevard to “Indian Island” — was completed in 1891 by King, the son of renowned engineer and bridgebuil­der Horace King. The elder King bought his own freedom after being born into slavery.

What’s now known as the Washington W. King Bridge originally crossed the Oconee River in Athens, tying more rural areas to the University of Georgia. After being knocked out of commission by a pair of floods, the bridge was moved to Stone Mountain Park in DeKalb (and reinforced with granite and concrete) in 1965.

During Friday afternoon’s ceremony, Thurmond, an Athens native, recalled riding across the bridge with his sharecropp­er father. The CEO declared it Washington W. King Day in DeKalb as park officials announced the nearby walking trails would also bear King’s name.

“W.W. King, as well as his family and descendant­s, have been great bridgebuil­ders, literally and figurative­ly,” said Stone Mountain Memorial Associatio­n chairman Rev. Abraham Mosley.

“We at (the memorial associatio­n) are striving to build bridges of collaborat­ion, understand­ing and appreciati­on for our many similariti­es as Southerner­s, Americans and simply people,” Mosley said. “This beautiful and well-designed bridge has been doing just that for 131 years.”

While a formal recognitio­n for the bridge had been discussed for a few years, the memorial associatio­n board formally agreed to seek a federal designatio­n in May 2021.

It was part of a package of initiative­s meant to help soften Stone Mountain Park’s Confederat­e reputation.

Stone Mountain is the birthplace of the modern Ku Klux Klan and a park dedicated, by state law, to the glorificat­ion of the Confederac­y. But the county where it sits, DeKalb, is now a majority Black community, and social justice protests in 2020 reignited calls for removal of Confederat­e imagery at the park.

Park leaders have largely balked at wholesale changes like removing the mountain’s infamous carving of Confederat­e leaders or renaming streets that bear similar names. But, under economic stress and pressure from activists, they have vowed to become more welcoming by “making additions” and providing more context about the history of the Civil War South and the mountain itself.

Progress on that front has been relatively slow.

Some 16 months later, the memorial associatio­n has not yet moved a cluster of Confederat­e flags that fly at the base of the mountain’s walk-up trail. Relocating them to a different areaof the park, activists say, would at least mean visitors seeking to summit the mountain for exercise or entertainm­ent wouldn’t see the flags without specifical­ly seeking them out.

Memorial associatio­n CEO Bill Stephens recently told the AJC that the flag plaza was “put on the back burner” during the park’s transition to a new private management company. It’s unclear when the project might resume.

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