Santa Fe New Mexican

Despite outcry over confederat­e statues, new ones go up

- By Jeff Martin and Brynn Anderson

ATLANTA — While Confederat­e statues and monuments around the nation get removed, defaced, covered up or toppled, some new memorials are being erected, by people who insist their only purpose is to honor Civil War soldiers who died for the South.

Supporters of these new monuments describe a determinat­ion to hold onto their understand­ing of history.

“What I want to get across is how much the South suffered, not only through the war but after the war, during the Reconstruc­tion years,” said David Coggins, who owns the Confederat­e Veterans Memorial Park in Brantley, Ala., which dedicated a memorial to “Unknown Alabama Confederat­e Soldiers” in September.

Others say race has nothing to do with these new monuments, unlike those erected in the years after the war.

“The problem was with some of the other statues that were put up, that were basically intended to intimidate people,” said Danny Francis, commander of a Sons of Confederat­e Veterans unit in South Carolina.

His group dedicated a $5,000, 7-foot monument Saturday on private land where Civil War enthusiast­s from North and South re-enact the Battle of Aiken each year.

The new markers still send a discrimina­tory message, according to the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People.

“We’re trying to heal a nation, and with more and more of these going up, it’s a continuous slap in the face,” said Benard Simelton, president of the NAACP’s Alabama conference. “These Confederat­e generals and soldiers committed acts of treason. They fought against the Union, but ‘for’ slavery. The Confederac­y fought to maintain the status quo of slavery and white supremacy.”

In New Orleans, Baltimore, Richmond and other Southern cities, some political leaders now openly challenge the idea that these markers are about “heritage.” They’ve described how many were erected in the early 1900s, when white mobs were terrorizin­g black communitie­s, and states were reversing Reconstruc­tion-era gains by former slaves and imposing discrimina­tory Jim Crow laws to ensure white power.

Supporters of the new markers say they’ve got nothing to do with that part of history, and no link to the hate groups defending Confederat­e monuments. “It’s for all the unknown soldiers — we don’t care if they were black, white or yellow or whatever,” said Joe Clark, southeast brigade commander with the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans’ Alabama division.

Clark and his red-shirted brigade carried battle flags and fired a cannon to dedicate Coggins’ new memorial, a white tombstone surrounded by a tall black iron fence in a park that already displayed replicas of Civil War artillery and Confederat­e flags.

“People stop and they have their children with them and they take pictures,” said Clark, who calls it a nice place to rest for travelers on Interstate 65.

Another memorial, erected last year on Courthouse Hill in Dahlonega, Ga., was 17 years in the making, said Tim Ragland, commander of the Blue Ridge Rifles Sons of Confederat­e Veterans Camp 1860.

Etched into the black marble, it says it’s “dedicated to the men of Lumpkin county who fought, who died, those who returned home, and to the cause in which they believed.”

The NAACP said such statues ignore what the Civil War was all about. “The historical meaning, intent, and outright disrespect noted in these Confederat­e symbols and monuments re-ignite the negative history and memories associated with them,” Alabama NAACP leaders said in a statement.

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