Lodi News-Sentinel

Baltimore mayor has Confederat­e monuments taken down overnight

- By Colin Campbell, Talia Richman and Luke Broadwater

BALTIMORE—Mayor Catherine Pugh says she decided Tuesday morning to remove four Confederat­e-linked statues from public spaces in Baltimore, then watched as crews worked into early Wednesday to tear them from their pedestals.

“We moved quickly and quietly,” said the mayor, who had pledged this week to remove them but would not say when. “There was enough grandstand­ing, enough speeches being made. Get it done.”

Pugh said crews removed the monuments unannounce­d and under cover of darkness between 11:30 p.m. and 5:30 a.m. in an effort to avoid the potential for a violent conflict similar to the one Saturday in Charlottes­ville, Va., where white nationalis­ts’ protest against that city’s plan to remove a statue of Confederat­e General Robert E. Lee turned deadly.

The mayor said she contacted contractor­s and on Tuesday hired Whiting-Turner, which used heavy machinery to do the overnight job. A group of protesters had pledged to tear down a monument to Lee and “Stonewall” Jackson at Wyman Park Dell near Johns Hopkins University Wednesday evening if the city did not.

“They needed to come down,” Pugh said. “My concern is for the safety and security of our people.”

Pugh declined to say how much it cost to remove the statues or where they were being kept. She said the city would provide cost details soon, but planned to keep the statues’ location a secret to avoid conflict.

When the monuments were loaded onto flat bed trucks and hauled away before sunrise Wednesday, it brought an abrupt end to more than a year of indecision about what to do with the memorials to Confederat­e leaders.

The issue was forced to the fore this week by the incident in Virginia, where a woman was killed when an alleged white supremacis­t rammed his car into a crowd of counter-protesters. In the wake of that violent encounter, the Baltimore City Council unanimousl­y passed a resolution this week calling for the removal of the city’s monuments to the Confederac­y. And the Maryland State House Trust voted Wednesday to remove a statue of Chief Justice Roger Brooke Taney — who has been linked to the Confederac­y for writing an 1857 decision that upheld slavery — from the lawn of the State House.

It was unclear Wednesday how soon the statue of Taney in Annapolis would be removed.

There were four monuments linked to the Confederac­y in Baltimore: the Lee-Jackson Monument, a monument to Taney at Mount Vernon Place, the Confederat­e Soldiers and Sailors Monument on Mount Royal Avenue and the Confederat­e Women’s Monument on West University Parkway.

Such monuments in Baltimore and elsewhere were sharply criticized in 2015 after white supremacis­t Dylann Roof killed six blacks at a church in Charleston, S.C.

Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, then Baltimore’s mayor, commission­ed a task force to prepare a report on what to do with the city’s monuments, but left the decision to Pugh, who was elected this past November.

The issue was relegated to the back burner until last weekend, when 32-year-old Heather Heyer was killed in Charlottes­ville. The attack drew further calls for the removal of the city’s statues. Now that they’re down, Pugh said officials are deciding what to do with them.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Workers remove a monument dedicated to the Confederat­e Women of Maryland near the intersecti­on of Charles St. and University Parkway early Wednesday morning.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN Workers remove a monument dedicated to the Confederat­e Women of Maryland near the intersecti­on of Charles St. and University Parkway early Wednesday morning.

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