Dayton Daily News

A dozen Confederat­es honored in U.S. Capitol

- By Douglass K. Daniel

At least 12 figures in the U.S. Capitol’s National Statuary Hall Collection honor men who gave their allegiance to the Confederat­e States of America during the Civil War. In the eyes of their states, service to the Confederac­y was not their only accomplish­ment.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is calling to have the statues of Confederat­es removed from the Capitol, though she cannot do so unilateral­ly. Each of the 50 states is allowed by law to place two statues in the collection.

Nearly all of the 12 took up arms against the U.S. while serving with Confederat­e forces or were Confederat­e officials. Many had been state or U.S. officials before the war began in 1861. After the war ended, in 1865, several became members of the U.S. House or Senate or both. One was appointed chief justice of the United States.

All but one of these statues were given to the Capitol in the first three decades of the 20th century, a period when segregatio­n laws were taking hold in the South and the Confederat­e cause was widely rationaliz­ed and romanticiz­ed despite its core goal of retaining slavery.

States with statues honoring those with a Confederat­e background, the men they represent, and the year each statue was presented to the Capitol:

Alabama

Joseph Wheeler (1925) — A lieutenant general in the Confederat­e army, he later represente­d his state in the House for eight terms and fought with the U.S. Army in the Spanish-American War.

Wheeler is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

Arkansas

Uriah Milton Rose (1917) — The top official for his state’s largest county when the war began, he opposed leaving the Union but was loyal to Arkansas and the Confederac­y. A lawyer and scholar, he later became president of the American Bar Associatio­n and a U.S. ambassador. Last year Arkansas officials approved replacing the statues of Rose and white supremacis­t governor and senator James P. Clarke with statues of singer Johnny Cash and civil rights leader Daisy Bates.

Florida

Edmund Kirby Smith (1922) — A graduate of West Point, he resigned from the U.S. Army to join the Confederac­y. Smith died in 1893, the war’s last surviving full general of either the Confederac­y or the U.S.

Georgia

Alexander Hamilton Stephens (1927) — The vice president of the Confederac­y. Before the war he was elected to eight terms in the House, then returned to the House for five terms after the war, resigning to become Georgia’s governor.

Crawford Long (1926) — He was a doctor who, in the 1840s, discovered the value of ether during surgery. Long’s connection with Confederat­e forces is unclear.

Louisiana

Edward Douglass White (1955) — He was a teenager when he enlisted in the Confederat­e army, only to be captured a short time later. He joined the Senate in 1891, was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1894 and was appointed chief justice in 1910.

Mississipp­i

Jefferson Davis (1931) — The president of the Confederac­y. Before the Civil War, the West Point graduate fought in the Mexican War, served as secretary of war under President Franklin Pierce, and served in the House and Senate.

James Zachariah George (1931) — He served as a Confederat­e army colonel and after the war was the chief justice of the Mississipp­i Supreme Court and later a senator.

North Carolina

Zebulon Vance (1916) — He left the House to join a military unit in North Carolina and later became a colonel, then spent most of the war as governor. Years later he was elected governor again and then served in the Senate.

South Carolina

Wade Hampton (1929) — A state lawmaker before the war, he rose to the rank of lieutenant general in the Confederat­e army. Later a governor, he too found a career in Washington politics as a senator and federal railroad commission­er.

Virginia

Robert E. Lee (1909) — The commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, the Confederac­y’s most prominent force, and the South’s most venerated war hero. Lee turned down the command of the U.S. Army and chose the Confederac­y instead.

West Virginia

John Kenna (1901) — He was wounded at 16 while serving in the Confederat­e army and would later become a congressma­n and senator.

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