Dayton Daily News

Confederat­e marker in Franklin to go

Township official said no complaints made about historic marker.

- By Ed Richter Staff Writer

A 90-year-old marker in remembranc­e of Gen. Robert E. Lee and the Dixie Highway will be removed, according to the city.

— If you blink while driving south on Dixie Highway just outside of Franklin, you might miss a marker honoring the Confederac­y.

These types of monuments have sparked controvers­y around the country, and now this 90-yearold marker in remembranc­e of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee and the Dixie Highway will be removed, according to the city.

“Right of Ways must remain clear to avoid the creation of a public safety hazard,” according to a statement sent Wednesday by the city.

The marker is on a rock at the corner of Hamilton Middletown Road and Dixie Highway on a city-owned easement across from Woodhill Cemetery.

“We’ve made a lot of progress in the last 50 years and we certainly don’t need to go backwards,” Franklin Mayor Denny Centers said before the city issued its statement above removing the marker. “Those historical monuments are just that — historical monuments to remind what happened in the past, right or wrong. Monuments are such an itty-bitty piece of this.”

Monuments or memorials such

as the one in Franklin don’t promote racism, he said. If that were the case, Centers said, there would be a lot of monuments coming down from various points in history.

The marker has also created some controvers­y about where it is actually located — in the city of Franklin or on Franklin Twp. property.

The marker is in the 50-foot easement of Dixie Highway, which the city has owned since the 1980s, according to Traci Stivers, Franklin Twp. administra­tor, who said she verified the informatio­n Wednesday with the Warren County Prosecutor’s Office and Engineer’s Office.

“We stand by our earlier statement on the importance of rememberin­g the history of our beloved country, and wish the City of Franklin’s elected officials the very best while deciding how they will proceed,” she said.

Centers was not so sure, saying, “We don’t know who the rightful owner is.”

He said the marker was rededicate­d by township trustees a number of years ago after a car crashed into it. Because of that, he believes the township is the owner.

“We have a lot of things in our easements that we don’t own such as power poles and water lines,” he said.

Earlier Wednesday, before learning the memorial was located in the city easement, Franklin Twp. Trustees President Beth Callahan said the marker wouldn’t be coming down and said she only became aware of it just in the past few days.

She said it’s history, but the story has to be told.

Callahan said the topic has never come up about removing the stone marker or been discussed, and in her 10 years as a trustee, no one had ever complained about it.

“It’s such a complicate­d issue,” she said. “There are some things in history that are nasty, but the story has to be told. Hatred and war are awful.”

She likened the issue to the Christians being tossed to the lions in ancient arenas.

“As a Christian, I don’t like that, but the story has to be told,” Callahan said. “Ripping out monuments won’t make the story go away. There is a lot of anger, but we have to forgive and not forget. We have to move forward or history will repeat itself.”

Stivers said she has never received any complaints about the marker and that the township does not maintain it.

“It’s never caused a problem and I see no reason to remove it,” Stivers said. “I would say half the township’s population doesn’t realize it’s there or even know what it is.”

Trustee Brian Morris agreed with Callahan. “I truly think the history of these markers and the concept of them being racist or unfair to people is blurring the lines between history and opinion,” he said. “I sympathize with anybody who has been treated unfairly in the past because of their ethnicity. However, these items are our history and we can learn valuable lessons and continue to learn.” Local historian Harriet Foley said a lot of people don’t recognize the marker because of where it is located. “I think they are a part of our history and should be left where they are,” she said.

 ?? ED RICHTER / STAFF ?? This marker in Franklin says it is in remembranc­e of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee and the Dixie Highway.
ED RICHTER / STAFF This marker in Franklin says it is in remembranc­e of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee and the Dixie Highway.
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