Daily Press

Charlottes­ville’s Lee statue melted down

Monument will be remade into ‘public art’

-

CHARLOTTES­VILLE — A statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee that was a focal point of a deadly white nationalis­t protest in 2017 was melted down and will be repurposed into new works of art.

The Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, a Charlottes­ville-based Black history museum, said Thursday the statue had been destroyed.

The Charlottes­ville City Council voted in 2021 to donate the statue to the heritage center, after it proposed a Swords into Plowshares project that would melt the statue and repurpose it into “public art that expresses the City’s values of inclusivit­y and racial justice,” according to the proposal submitted to the city.

The statue was taken down in 2021 after years of debate and delay.

Protests over the plan to remove the statue morphed into the violent “Unite the Right” rally in 2017. During that rally, avowed Hitler admirer James Alex Fields Jr. intentiona­lly drove his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring 19 others. Fields is serving a life sentence.

Two groups seeking to preserve the statue sued last year to try to block the city from donating it to the heritage center, but a judge tossed their case. At a news conference Thursday, heritage center officials said they now plan to solicit proposals on how to repurpose the statue. The center hopes to pick an artist next year and is conducting a $4 million fundraisin­g campaign.

For now, the bronze from the statue has been molded into ingots stamped with the words “SWORDS INTO PLOWSHARES,” some of which were on display at the news conference.

“Our efforts have been not to remove history but bear witness to the truths about our racist pasts and our aspiration­s for a more equitable future,” said Andrea Douglas, director of the heritage center.

 ?? CAL CARY/THE DAILY PROGRESS ?? Jalane Schmidt, director of the Memory Project at the University of Virginia Karsh Institute of Democracy, points Thursday at the photos of the statue of Robert E. Lee being melted.
CAL CARY/THE DAILY PROGRESS Jalane Schmidt, director of the Memory Project at the University of Virginia Karsh Institute of Democracy, points Thursday at the photos of the statue of Robert E. Lee being melted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States