Herald-Tribune

Fla. honors Robert E. Lee’s birth, 2 other Confederat­e holidays

- C. A. Bridges USA TODAY NETWORK – FLORIDA

On Friday, the state of Florida officially honors the birth of a man who led armies to fight against the United States of America.

Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee’s birthday is one of three Confederat­e holidays still on the books in the Sunshine State after well over a century, despite numerous attempts to remove them.

The holidays were added across the South during the years after Reconstruc­tion, historians say, when Confederat­e supporters were promoting the false “Lost Cause” mythology, reshaping Southern textbooks, renaming cities and counties, downplayin­g the causes of the war and the evils of slavery, and erecting Confederat­e monuments in public squares to glorify Confederat­e leaders.

In recent years there has been a revitalize­d movement to remove such tributes, especially after 2015 when white supremacis­t Dylann Roof murdered nine Black church members in Charleston, South Carolina in what he said was an effort to bring back segregatio­n or start a race war. News and videos of police brutality and systemic racism, high-profile cases like the deaths of Trayvon Martin, George Floyd, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and Breonna Taylor, and increasing­ly violent protests, shootings and bomb threats by white supremacis­t and neo-Nazi groups led to widespread protests and demonstrat­ions calling for a renewed push for social and racial justice.

In the last couple of decades, Confederat­e holidays have been quietly removed, renamed, or dropped from “paid day off ” status, but they still remain enshrined in many states’ laws and there has been pushback against further Confederac­y removal. A new bill filed for the 2024 Florida Legislativ­e Session would punish not only anyone removing Florida’s Confederat­e memorials

but would be retroactiv­e back to January 2017.

What Confederat­e holidays does Florida observe?

Robert E. Lee’s birthday, Jan. 19 Confederat­e Memorial Day, April 26 Jefferson Davis’ birthday, June 3

What is Confederat­e Memorial Day?

Confederat­e Memorial Day was started in Georgia in April 1866 to commemorat­e the deaths of Confederat­e soldiers on the first anniversar­y of the day that Confederat­e Gen. Joseph Johnson surrendere­d the Armey of Tennessee to Union Gen. William Sherman in Bennett Place, North Carolina, which many in the Confederac­y felt marked the end of the Civil War. Lee had surrendere­d the Army of Northern Virginia to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant two weeks earlier.

The holiday spread to the other 10 Confederat­e states with some changing it to locally important dates.

When did Florida add Confederat­e holidays to state law?

Confederat­e Memorial Day and Lee’s birthday were enshrined in Florida law in 1895, 30 years after the end of the Civil War. Jefferson Davis Day was added in 1905.

Does Florida recognize Lee’s birthday and other Confederat­e holidays as paid holidays?

No. The three Confederat­e holidays are legal holidays but not official state ones.

Other legal holidays in Florida include Susan B. Anthony’s

birthday, Good Friday, Pascua Florida Day (which marks the discovery of Florida in 1513 by Juan Ponce de Leon) and Flag Day.

What states celebrate Lee’s birthday?

Alabama and Mississipp­i still recognize all three days as paid holidays for state employees.

North Carolina lists Lee’s birthday and Confederat­e Memorial Day. Arkansas has a Robert E. Lee Day on the second Saturday in October, along with Davis’ birthday.

After Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday became a federal holiday in 1983, several states combined MLK and Lee celebratio­ns out of convenienc­e to create “King-Lee Day” or “MLK-Lee Day.”

All but Alabama and Mississipp­i later separated them again.

Virginia, Lee’s home state, added King to their existing Lee-Jackson Day, which also honored Confederat­e Gen. Stonewall Jackson, until it was split up in 2000. Virginia continued to observe Lee-Jackson Day until 2021.

In the same year (2000) that South Carolina finally recognized King with a state holiday, the state also added Confederat­e Memorial Day.

Tennesee observed Lee’s birthday from 1917 to 1969 when it was changed to a “special day of observance,” but state law requires the governor to proclaim Jan. 19 as Robert E. Lee Day, along with Confederat­e Decoration Day (June 3), Nathan Bedford Forrest Day (July 13) and Davis’ birthday.

Lousiana honored Lee’s birthday until 2022 when it was successful­ly removed from the state holiday calendar. Texas has celebrated “Lee Day” since 1931 but changed it to Confederat­e Heroes Day in 1973. Georgia

commemorat­ed Lee in November and Confederat­e Memorial Day in April but in 2015 both holidays were replaced with unnamed “State Holidays.”

Why does Florida still have Confederat­e holidays?

Senate Minority Leader Lauren Book, D-Davie, has tried three times to have Confederat­e holidays stricken from Florida Statutes, starting in 2017 after the deadly rallies in Charlottes­ville, North Carolina.

The first bill she filed took aim at Confederat­e Memorial Day but it was withdrawn and another was introduced to remove all three.

Bills she filed in 2021 and 2022 not only sought to remove the holidays but attempted to strike Florida Statutes 256.051 and 256.10, which protect “the flags of the Confederac­y” from being mutilated.

“As a State, we must underscore diversity and undercut tributes to Confederac­y, which upheld the institutio­n of slavery,” Book said in a statement in 2021. “With the hate and divisivene­ss we’re seeing today, it is more important than ever to condemn racism and reaffirm that we are indeed ‘one nation, indivisibl­e, with liberty and justice for all — not just for some.”

The bills have faced intense opposition in the Florida Legislatur­e from lawmakers who say that Confederat­e holidays and memorials represent history and heritage, and they object to what they call the erasure of history and the rise of “cancel culture.”

‘“I always have a bit of pain in my heart when I realize people don’t want to respect each other’s history,” Sen. Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala, whose great-greatgreat-grandfathe­r fought for the Confederac­y, said about the 2022 bill. “The good, the bad, and the ugly.”

All three bills of Book’s died in committee.

 ?? CAITLYN JORDAN/NAPLES DAILY NEWS ?? A Confederat­e flag with an upside down Florida state seal is flown at the 2022 Patriot Fest on March 19, 2022, at Sugden Regional Park in Naples.
CAITLYN JORDAN/NAPLES DAILY NEWS A Confederat­e flag with an upside down Florida state seal is flown at the 2022 Patriot Fest on March 19, 2022, at Sugden Regional Park in Naples.

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