Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

‘AN INCREDIBLE DAY’: LEE STATUE REMOVED IN CHARLOTTES­VILLE

- BY SARAH RANKIN

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — Cheers erupted Saturday as a Confederat­e statue that towered for nearly a century over downtown Charlottes­ville was carted away by truck from the Virginia city where it had become a flashpoint for racist protests and deadly violence.

It was a day of palpable joy and immense relief for scores of residents and visitors who lined neighborin­g streets to watch the largerthan-life figure of Gen. Robert E. Lee as it was hoisted from its pedestal and taken — at least for now — to storage.

The statue’s removal came more than five years after racial justice activists had renewed a push to take down the monument, an initiative that drew the attention of white supremacis­ts and other racist groups, culminatin­g in the violent “Unite the Right” rally in 2017.

“I’m ecstatic that we’re here now. It’s sad that it’s taken so much to get us to this point. But this is an incredible day,” said Don Gathers, a local Black activist who long advocated for the statue’s removal.

Work to remove Lee’s statue, and one of Confederat­e Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson shortly after, proceeded peacefully and without interrupti­on. It was a project held up for years by a long, winding legal fight coupled with changes in a state law that protected war memorials.

Also removed Saturday was a statue depicting Sacagawea, and explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, which has been criticized for a depiction of the Native American guide and interprete­r some view as subservien­t and weak.

Couples, families with small children and activists looked on Saturday.

“Good atmosphere, good vibes, good energy,” said Jim Henson, a resident of a nearby community who came to see the “historic” event.

Ralph Dixon, a 59-year-old Black man born and raised in Charlottes­ville, was documentin­g Saturday’s activities, a camera draped around his neck.

Dixon said he was brought as a schoolchil­d to the park where the Lee statue stood. “All the teachers, my teachers anyway, were always talking about what a great person this was,” he said.

He said his understand­ing of Lee’s legacy and the statue’s message evolved as he matured. He said it was important to understand the statue was erected not directly after the Civil War but during the Jim Crow era when Black Americans’ rights were being stripped away.

Especially after the violence of Aug. 12, 2017, which left 32-year-old Heather Heyer dead and dozens more injured after a car plowed into a crowd of peaceful counterpro­testers, he said there was no reason it should stay. A Virginia State Police helicopter assisting with the rally also crashed that weekend, killing the pilot and a trooper.

 ?? JOHN C. CLARK/AP ?? Workers remove the monument of Gen. Robert E. Lee on Saturday in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.
JOHN C. CLARK/AP Workers remove the monument of Gen. Robert E. Lee on Saturday in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

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