The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga.’s paean to Confederac­y at U.S. Capitol must go

- By Alexander M. Stephens and Brendan A. Stephens

Dear Georgia General Assembly and Gov. Nathan Deal:

We are proud Georgians. We are also the greatgreat-great-grandnephe­ws of Alexander H. Stephens, vice president of the Confederac­y. As far as we know, we are among his closest living relatives. We are writing to urge you to remove the statue of Stephens currently sitting in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall.

We realize many people have never heard of Alexander H. Stephens. If you have, it was probably in a history class or in reference to the now-infamous “Cornerston­e Speech” where he described the foundation­al principles of the Confederat­e government. Slavery and white supremacy formed the bedrock.

In the speech, Stephens claimed that most of the people who wrote the founding documents of the United States erroneousl­y believed “that the enslavemen­t of the African was ... wrong in principle, socially, morally, and politicall­y.”

“Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foundation­s are laid, its cornerston­e rests, upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordinat­ion to the superior race is his natural and normal condition.”

We know people who want Confederat­e statues to stay standing because they see them as memorials for lives lost or symbols of the willingnes­s to fight for a cause. Regardless of why individual­s took up arms, the ultimate cause of the Confederac­y was the preservati­on of slavery and white supremacy. We understand that generation­s of white Southerner­s have been taught to deny or diminish that fact. We understand because we share the experience.

We grew up with the hazy view of history that results from selective rememberin­g, and we inherited “Lost Cause” myths that emerged after the Civil War to sanitize the Confederac­y and justify Jim Crow. We learned that Alexander H. Stephens initially opposed secession, but not that he spent his entire political career maneuverin­g to preserve and expand slavery. Thinking back, small details we heard amplify massive silences in the stories we were told. We learned the name of Stephens’s dog. But nobody around us ever quoted or even mentioned the “Cornerston­e Speech.”

We had to unlearn the Lost Cause version of history. It was uncomforta­ble to shatter our own illusions because we want to be proud of who we come from, but we invite you to join us in this long-overdue work because those feelings are nothing compared to the suffering that those illusions enabled.

Lost Cause monuments need to go because they hide far more history than they reveal, and the statue of Stephens is a prime example. In 1902, a state commission decided that he should represent Georgia in the U.S. Capitol. The decision came amidst a surge in constructi­on of monuments to former Confederat­es, which followed the overthrow of multiracia­l state government­s and the violent entrenchme­nt of Jim Crow regimes. Remarks at unveilings around the South often made the connection between those two trends explicit. The towering monuments assured everyone, especially black Southerner­s, that white supremacis­t rule had returned.

It was not until the 1920s that Georgia managed to arrange for a Stephens statue to go to Washington. In December 1927, thousands of Georgians, including our grandfathe­r and great-grandparen­ts, traveled to the U.S. Capitol for the dedication. Engraved at the top of the white marble podium, above all his other titles, was his most celebrated office —”Vice President of the Confederac­y.”

The man who etched those words was sculptor Gutzon Borglum, a Klan sympathize­r renowned in Georgia for designing the Confederat­e monument at Stone Mountain, the site where the KKK had announced its recent rebirth. At the dedication of the Stephens statue, Borglum waxed poetic about the need to build Confederat­e monuments so that “our children and our children’s children” would have “true records of what manner of men they were.” We are those “children’s children,” and we know now that these statues do not preserve the truth. They conceal it.

Confederat­e monuments need to come down. Put them in museums where people will learn about the context of their creation, but remove them from public spaces so that the descendant­s of enslaved people no longer walk beneath them at work and on campus. Remove them so that children never again gaze up at them from the swingsets of their local parks. Some of our relatives may disagree with our proposal, but they instilled values in us that made it possible for us to write these words: remove the statue of Alexander H. Stephens from the U.S. Capitol. Alabama has already replaced one of its Confederat­e monuments in the Statuary Hall and Florida has initiated the process of replacing its Lost Cause statue there. We urge Georgians to join us in calling for our state to do the same.

When regimes change, their monuments usually fall. Movements led largely by descendant­s of enslaved people forced changes to the regimes of slavery and Jim Crow. Most white Southerner­s denounce those systems today, but for too long too many of us have accepted stories and statues used to prop them up.

Recent acts of white supremacis­t terrorism in Charleston and Charlottes­ville are glaring reminders that the past lives on in the present, and the ongoing history of white supremacy is visible every day — from predatory lending and gentrifica­tion, to hiring discrimina­tion and voter suppressio­n, to the targeted policing and incarcerat­ion of black communitie­s. While not enough, the removal of Confederat­e symbols is a necessary step. Help us take responsibi­lity for this history now and refuse to pass these monuments on to yet another generation.

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