Marin Independent Journal

Confederat­e statue removed from spot at Ole Miss

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, MISS. » A Confederat­e monument that’s long been a divisive symbol at the University of Mississipp­i was removed Tuesday from a prominent spot on the Oxford campus, just two weeks after Mississipp­i surrendere­d the last state flag in the U.S. with the Confederat­e battle emblem.

The marble statue of a saluting Confederat­e soldier will be taken to a Civil War cemetery in a secluded area of campus. Students and faculty have pushed the university for years to move the statue, but they say their work is being undermined by administra­tors’ plan to beautify the cemetery.

A draft plan by the university indicates that the burial ground eventually will feature a lighted pathway to the statue and that headstones might be added to Confederat­e soldiers’ graves that have been unmarked for decades.

“Moving the monument should be a clear stand against racism, not another embarrassi­ng attempt to placate those who wish to maintain the university’s connection to Confederat­e symbols,” faculty members from the university’s history department wrote in a joint statement last month.

University Chancellor Glenn Boyce said the new site is not intended to glorify the soldiers.

“It’s not going to create a shrine to the Confederac­y,” Boyce told The Associated Press last month at the state Capitol. “People will have to judge that when they see the end product.”

The University of Mississipp­i was founded in 1848, and the statue of the soldier was put up in 1906 — one of many Confederat­e monuments erected across the South more than a century ago.

Critics say the statue’s location near the university’s main administra­tive building has sent a signal that Ole Miss glorifies the Confederac­y and glosses over the South’s history of slavery.

The state College Board on June 18 approved a plan to move the monument. The decision happened amid widespread debate over Confederat­e symbols as people across the U.S. and in other countries loudly marched through the streets to protest racism and police violence against African Americans.

The statue at Ole Miss was a gathering point in 1962 for people who rioted to oppose court-ordered integratio­n of the university.

In February 2019, a rally by outside pro-Confederat­e groups at the monument prompted Ole Miss basketball players to kneel in protest during the national anthem at a game later that day. Student government leaders voted two weeks later for a resolution asking administra­tors to move the monument to the cemetery, where Confederat­e soldiers killed at the Battle of Shiloh are buried.

One of the student senators sponsoring that resolution was Arielle Hudson of Tunica, Mississipp­i, who graduated this year and has been selected as a Rhodes scholar. She said Thursday that her joy at knowing the statue was moved has been tempered by concerns about the university’s elaborate cemetery plan.

As a student, Hudson gave tours to prospectiv­e students through an “ambassador” program. She said ambassador­s were generally told to avoid the Confederat­e statue, but she once ended up near it.

 ?? BRUCE NEWMAN — THE OXFORD EAGLE ?? The Confederat­e statue located in the Circle at the University of Mississipp­i in Oxford is lowered to the ground Tuesday as part of the process to move it to the Confederat­e Soldiers Cemetery.
BRUCE NEWMAN — THE OXFORD EAGLE The Confederat­e statue located in the Circle at the University of Mississipp­i in Oxford is lowered to the ground Tuesday as part of the process to move it to the Confederat­e Soldiers Cemetery.

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