Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

History shared but unreconcil­ed in Confederat­e statue in Tuskegee

Monument still stands in the heart of the poor, mostly black Alabama town

- By Jay Reeves

TUSKEGEE, Ala. — In 1906, when aging, white Confederat­e veterans of the Civil War and black exslaves still lived on the old plantation­s of the Deep South, two very different celebratio­ns were afoot in this city known even then as a beacon of black empowermen­t.

Tuskegee Institute, founded to educate Southern blacks whose families had lived in bondage for generation­s, was saluting its 25th anniversar­y.

Meanwhile, area whites were preparing to dedicate a monument to rebel soldiers in a downtown park set aside exclusivel­y for white people.

Flash forward to today and that same Confederat­e monumentst­ill stands in the same park, both owned by a Confederat­e heritage group. They sit in the heart of a poor, mostly black town of 9,800 people.

The story of how such a monument could remain in place a century later offers lessons in just how hard it can be to confront a shared history that still divides a nation.

In 1860, before the Civil War, Census records show 1,020 white people owned 18,176 black people inMacon County, where Tuskegee sits.

Establishe­d by the Alabama Legislatur­e, the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute was foundedin1­881, according to the school’s official history.

By the time of Tuskegee’s 25th anniversar­y, founder Booker T. Washington was widely acclaimed for advocating practical education, character building and hard work to lift blacks frompovert­y.

Coverage of the anniversar­y festivitie­s in The Tuskegee News, a whiteowned newspaper, emphasized that blacks needed to get along with the whites who had near total control in the old Confederat­e states.

Meanwhile, the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, composed of female descendant­s of Confederat­e veterans, was erecting monuments glorifying the “lost cause” of the South across the region. Thewomen of the Tuskegee chapter planned one for their town, holding events to raise money.

Two months after the Tuskegee Institute anniversar­y, leaders of the whitecontr­olled county government gave the United Daughters the 2-acre, main downtown square to serve as a “park for white people” around a memorial to Macon County’s Confederat­e veterans, city records show.

The monument finally was dedicated on Oct. 6, 1909. The Montgomery Advertiser called the ceremony “one of the largestmas­ses of white people ever before witnessed inTuskegee.”

Newspaper stories from the time don’t say whether any blacks attended the event, but they most certainly were around. Macon County was around 82 percent black then, Census records show, although Jim Crow laws kept whites in firm political control.

The nation’s first black combat pilots, the Tuskegee Airmen, trained in town in the 1940s, but not until the 1960s did the civil rights movement start changing political dynamics.

Frustrated after an allwhite jury in another county acquitted a white man accused of murder in the shooting death of a civil rights worker, Samuel L. Younge Jr., blacks took out theiranger­ontheConfe­derate monument in 1966.

On a night when rocks flew through windows around the town square, demonstrat­ors identified in news accounts as Tuskegee studentswe­nt after theConfede­rate monument, attaching a chain or rope to it.

“We didn’t have a vehicle to topple it that night and that’s why it’s still there,” said Simuel Schutz Jr., 72, a demonstrat­or who is nowa contractor inTrenton, N.J.

Butprotest­ers did paint a yellow stripe down the back of the stone soldier with the words “black power” scrawled on the base in black paint.

First elected mayor in 1972 but now out of office, Johnny Ford said he tried to have the monument relocated after taking office and again in 2015. Both efforts failed, as did a few similar attempts during the intervenin­g years.

For some, the statue is just part of the city’s landscape and isn’t much of an issue.

“It’s just part of Tuskegee, part of its history,” said Kelvin Stephens, a blackmanwh­oworks in a computer shop near the memorial.

TheUnitedD­aughters of the Confederac­y still owns the square where the monument stands, and they don’t plan to remove it.

“It is a wonderful addition to the downtown area and has been there for over 100 years, and the United Daughters see no reason for it to change,” said a letter to the citybyanat­torney for the group, Richard L. Wyatt.

The fewmembers still in town cleaned the statue after vandals tagged it with spray paint about three years ago, Wyatt said in an interview, but they’ve yet to remove black paint that stains the gray stone following a similar incident in October.

Mayor Lawrence F. Haygood Jr. has said he understand­s why some people want the statue gone, but there are no moves afoot to remove it as the one-year anniversar­y approaches of a deadly confrontat­ion over a Confederat­e monument in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

It’s unclearwhe­theranythi­ng can be done anyway, as Alabama legislator­s passed a law last year banning the removal or alteration of sites includingC­onfederate monuments like the one in Tuskegee.

“It’s just there in town like it’s always been,” said the mayor.

 ??  ?? ClevelandC­linicFlori­da.org/SecondOpin­ion
ClevelandC­linicFlori­da.org/SecondOpin­ion

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States