The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Battle grows over Confederat­e remnants

Debate about statues, monuments divides nation.

- By Katie Zezima and Aaron Williams

James Cole is upset that Confederat­e monuments still exist in this country. Stuart Waldo is disappoint­ed that people want to take them down.

Cole, 16, attended Robert E. Lee Elementary School in Tampa, Fla., with thousands of other black children. He is now working to change its name.

Waldo, 53, is the proud descendant of Confederat­e soldiers. Each year he lays a wreath at a monument to a Civil War infantry unit in Prattville, Ala.

Cole and Waldo sit on opposite sides of an issue roiling the country: What to do with the more than 1,500 statues, schools, roads, holidays and other commemorat­ions of the Confederac­y nationwide? The Southern Poverty Law Center has identified and tallied those tributes and memorials, but the total number is likely higher.

In the wake of violence last month at a white supremacis­t rally at the Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottes­ville, Va., which killed one person and injured 19, some cities are moving quickly to take down memorials to the Confederac­y. The Lexington-Fayette Urban County Council in Lexington, Ky., approved a plan to move two statues. In Portsmouth, Va., a petition launched to replace the city’s Confederat­e monument with a statue of a city native: Grammy-winning rapper, dancer and producer Missy Elliott. It has garnered nearly 33,000 signatures. In Baltimore, crews quietly removed four statues under cover of night in the days after Charlottes­ville.

“This was a decision that I made,” Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh said. “I made it in the best interest of the city.”

sewhere, artists and historic preservati­onists have raised concerns about the rapid removal of Confederat­e monuments — and in some places new ones have been erected. Last year, Brandenbur­g, Ky., saved a Confederat­e monument that nearby Louisville had removed and perched it atop a hill overlookin­g the Ohio River. In Chickamaug­a, Ga., a new statue of a Confederat­e soldier was unveiled last year. And in Crenshaw County, Ala., a new monument was dedicated last month in Confederat­e Veterans Memorial Park.

“It’s important that we remember our heritage,” said the park’s operator, David Coggins, adding that people who attended the unveiling were not racists. “And it’s very important we remem

ber our history, for those people that forget their heritage ... are doomed to repeat it again.”

The overwhelmi­ng majority of America’s Confederat­e monuments are in the South. Virginia has the country’s largest concentrat­ion, with at least 223. But they also pop up in unlikely places: one was erected in Montana, which didn’t become a state until after the Civil War, and another in Massachuse­tts, nearly 14,000 residents of which died fighting for the Union army. Montana removed its monument in mid-August and Massachuse­tts covered its up in June.

In St. Cloud, Fla., which was founded in large part by thousands of Union veterans, there’s a Confederat­e monument and Robert E. Lee Road. The monument in St. Cloud, along with at least 30 others nationwide, were unveiled in this century, but many were put up during the 1950s and ’60s during the civil rights movement.

In the places where they exist, signs of the Confederac­y can be assertive, like

enormous bronze statues, or more subtle, like Maury Lane, a road in Alexandria, Va., likely named for Confederat­e Navy officer Matthew Fontaine Maury. But to people such as Cole and Waldo, they have vastly dif- ferent meanings.

Keeping history alive

About seven years ago, Waldo, an avid golfer, saw a Sons of Confederat­e Veterans bumper sticker on a car in a golf course parking lot. The lifelong Southerner knew he had Confederat­e ancestors and learned details of their lives from his grandmothe­r’s memoirs. So he decided to go to a chapter meeting and research his family’s history.

Waldo, who is white, found the grave of his great-greatgreat grandfathe­r, Elijah Hunt, a private in the Confederat­e army, in Newnan, Ga. Waldo and his family traveled the 140 miles to the cemetery, where nearly 300 Confederat­e soldiers are buried, and saw his small white headstone.

“It kind of made the history of my ancestors come alive, to find their graves,” Waldo said.

The discovery led Waldo to become deeply involved in the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans and the preservati­on of Confederat­e monuments. He is the commander of the Prattville Dragoons Camp of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, which honors a Civil War infantry unit from the area.

The camp hands out small Confederat­e flags at town events and lays a wreath at the site of two monuments to the dragoons on the last Monday in April, when the state celebrates Confederat­e Memorial Day.

Waldo believes the fight over monuments is about history, not race, and says removing the monuments is tantamount to erasing the past. He notes his ancestor didn’t own slaves.

“He went to war to protect his home and his family, and that’s why we from a personal standpoint very much want to honor them,” Waldo said.

He believes those opposed to the monuments should be respected and deplores the

violence that has emerged at some sites. Still, he says no one he knows in Prattville has even considered taking the city’s three monuments down.

“If you ask people who live in these towns, the vast majority don’t want their history erased, don’t want their monuments taken down,” he said. “It’s a lot of folks who come from elsewhere and frankly I believe are instigator­s.”

A man to look up to?

James Christian Cole remembers walking up the stairs of his public school in fourth grade and seeing a huge picture of Robert E. Lee at the top. Maybe, he thought, that was a man he could look up to.

Cole is “absolutely positive” that many current students and alumni are unaware that their school was named after Lee or the role Lee played in history. He considers himself lucky to have learned from a teacher in middle school.

“I think of that mural all the time, definitely with what’s happening now,” he said. “I just wonder what possibly could be going through those kids’ heads, because I know it went through mine.”

Cole, now a high school junior, is fighting to change the school’s name. As president of the Hillsborou­gh

County NAACP’s youth council, he took his request to the Hillsborou­gh County School Board, which says it will take at least 18 months to consider the change.

Cole and others plan to keep pressure on the board to ensure the school is renamed, including attending monthly school board meetings. He would like to see the school instead honor Carter G. Woodson, an author and historian known as the father of black history month.

Cole does not believe the argument that the fight over statues is about heritage. The white supremacis­ts rally in Charlottes­ville, he said, is “a very good representa­tion of the people who support this and what they are about and how they view the world.”

 ?? KEVIN D. LILES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Stuart Waldo, a member of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, poses for a portrait following an unveiling of a monument to unknown Confederat­e dead at Confederat­e Veterans Memorial Park in Brantley, Ala., on Aug. 27.
KEVIN D. LILES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Stuart Waldo, a member of the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans, poses for a portrait following an unveiling of a monument to unknown Confederat­e dead at Confederat­e Veterans Memorial Park in Brantley, Ala., on Aug. 27.
 ?? EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? James Cole Jr. poses for a portrait in front of Robert E. Lee Elementary School on Aug. 28 in Tampa, Fla. Cole attended the elementary school in fourth grade in the 2009-2010 school year. He is working to change the name of the school.
EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE WASHINGTON POST James Cole Jr. poses for a portrait in front of Robert E. Lee Elementary School on Aug. 28 in Tampa, Fla. Cole attended the elementary school in fourth grade in the 2009-2010 school year. He is working to change the name of the school.

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