Orlando Sentinel

2nd time capsule apparently found at site of Lee statue

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND, Va. — Crews wrapping up the removal Monday of a giant pedestal that once held a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond found what appeared to be a second and long-soughtafte­r time capsule, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam said.

The governor tweeted photos of a box being removed from the site and said conservato­rs were studying the artifact.

“They found it! This is likely the time capsule everyone was looking for,” he tweeted.

The governor said the box would not be opened Monday. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what condition any contents might be in.

The developmen­t marked the latest turn in a monthslong search for the capsule, which contempora­neous news accounts indicate was placed during a cornerston­e-laying ceremony in 1887 attended by thousands of people. News accounts described its dozens of donated artifacts, including Confederat­e memorabili­a. Based on historical records, some have also speculated the capsule might contain a rare photo of deceased President Abraham Lincoln.

Earlier this month, crews dismantlin­g the pedestal found a time capsule embedded in a granite block that some initially thought might have been the one placed in 1887. But after state conservato­rs spent hours last week gingerly prying the box open, they didn’t find the expected trove of objects related to the Confederac­y. Instead, conservato­rs pulled out a few waterlogge­d books, a silver coin and an envelope with some papers.

The prevailing theory last week was that the lead box was left by a person — or persons — who oversaw the monument’s constructi­on.

The search for the 1887 time capsule resumed Monday.

Devon Henry, the contractor whose company was overseeing the removal, said the box was found inside a granite enclosure basically at ground level, surrounded by fill and other constructi­on material. Workers pulled off the top of the granite enclosure to find the box, which appeared to be made of copper, Henry said.

The box was then covered in bubble wrap and transporte­d from the site for further study, he said.

The Lee statue, which depicted the general atop a horse, was erected on the soaring pedestal in 1890 in the former capital of the Confederac­y. Its removal in September came more than a year after Northam ordered it in the wake of protests that erupted after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

The statue was one of five enormous Confederat­e tributes along Monument Avenue, and the only one that belonged to the state. The four city-owned statues were taken down in 2020.

Northam’s administra­tion initially planned to leave the pedestal in place but announced in early December that contractor­s would remove the behemoth, now covered in graffiti, and transfer the grassy traffic circle it inhabited to the city of Richmond. The administra­tion has said it will be stored until “next steps” have been determined.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP ?? Workers found what is believed to be a time capsule from 1887 in rubble that remained after the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Virginia.
STEVE HELBER/AP Workers found what is believed to be a time capsule from 1887 in rubble that remained after the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Virginia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States