Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Deal will keep ‘Silent Sam’ off UNC campus

Statue to go to group of Confederat­e Sons

- By Jonathan Drew

RALEIGH, N.C. — The University of North Carolina announced this week that a torn-down Confederat­e monument won’t return to campus under a legal agreement that hands over the “Silent Sam” statue to a group of Confederat­e descendant­s.

The University of North Carolina System said in a news release Wednesday that a judge approved a settlement giving possession of the monument to the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, who will keep the statue outside the 14 counties where there are university system campuses. Silent Sam stood in a main quad of the flagship Chapel Hill campus for more than a century before it was toppled in 2018 by protesters.

The announceme­nt comes after the university and statewide Board of Governors spent more than a year grappling with what to do with the prominent but divisive monument, a challengin­g period during which the Chapel Hill chancellor resigned and the campus police chief who oversaw the response to the statue’s toppling retired.

Under the agreement, university officials also will create a $2.5 million private fund that can be used for expenses related to preserving the monument or potentiall­y building a facility to house it. No state money will be used to build the fund, the news release said.

The university system said the settlement complies with a 2015 North Carolina state law restrictin­g the removal of Confederat­e monuments.

“The safety and security concerns expressed by students, faculty and staff are genuine, and we believe this consent judgment not only addresses those concerns but does what is best for the university, and the university community in full compliance with North Carolina law,” Jim Holmes, a member of the UNC Board of Governors, said in a statement.

The university system statement said that the settlement was in response to a lawsuit filed by the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans.

University system spokesmen didn’t immediatel­y respond to emails asking for a copy of the legal settlement.

R. Kevin Stone, commander of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans’ North Carolina division, issued a statement that the group was pleased to gain ownership of the statue.

“We have been involved in ongoing negotiatio­ns and collaborat­ion to achieve this outcome and we believe it is a fair result,” he said.

The group didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email asking about plans for the statue and where it may end up.

The legal settlement marks the end of a long and fraught debate among the students, faculty, alumni and administra­tors about whether Confederat­e monuments belong on campuses. While the conversati­on stretched back decades, protests around the statue intensifie­d in the aftermath of a deadly white supremacis­t rally in Virginia in 2017.

Critics of Silent Sam called it a racist symbol, while supporters said it was meant to honor ancestors who fought and died in the Civil War.

The statue came down in late 2018 after hundreds of protesters erected massive banners on poles and used diversions to conceal work to yank down the statue with a rope. With the statue gone, protests continued around its empty pedestal as the university made fits and starts toward a permanent solution.

In late 2018, the statewide governing board rejected a proposal overseen by then-Chancellor Carol Folt to move the statue from a main quad and build a $5 million facility for it elsewhere on campus. Weeks later, Folt ordered the removal of the base while also announcing she was stepping down as chancellor.

 ?? Gerry Broome The Associated Press file ?? Police stand guard after the Confederat­e statue known as “Silent Sam” was toppled by protesters in August 2018 on the University of North Carolina campus in Chapel Hill, N.C. The university said this week that the monument won’t return to campus.
Gerry Broome The Associated Press file Police stand guard after the Confederat­e statue known as “Silent Sam” was toppled by protesters in August 2018 on the University of North Carolina campus in Chapel Hill, N.C. The university said this week that the monument won’t return to campus.

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