The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

DeKalb wants to move monument

County pursues legal options for removing Confederat­e obelisk.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

A 30-foot-tall pillar honoring the Confederac­y will be removed from downtown Decatur — if DeKalb County can find a legal way around a state law keeping it and other Georgia monuments in place.

All except one of the members of the DeKalb Board of Commission­ers on Tuesday agreed to pursue the removal of the towering monument that has stood next to the old county courthouse for 109 years. If successful, DeKalb could be one of the first communitie­s in Georgia to uproot a monument lionizing the South’s Civil War cause.

The resolution orders the county’s lawyers to find options to

relocate the obelisk, which refers to Confederat­e soldiers as members of a “covenant keeping race who held fast to the faith as it was given by the fathers of the Republic.”

State law prohibits Confederat­e monuments from being “relo-

cated, removed, concealed, obscured, or altered in any fashion.” But it allows government­s to take action to preserve or protect monuments. The resolution notes that the monument has been vandalized twice recently.

Some of those who have lobbied for the monument to come down say it should be shuttled to a cemetery or a museum. There, it would remain in public view but not so prominentl­y.

“We know the importance of symbols in America. We have to recognize that this particular symbol cannot be held up” as an emblem of the community, Mawuli Davis, president of the Beacon Hill Branch of the NAACP, said during public comments to commission­ers. “This symbol was erected in 1908 on the heels of the Atlanta Race Riots as a symbol to intimidate African-Americans.”

A white mob killed dozens of African Americans during the 1906 riots.

But a lone supporter of the monument in attendance at Tuesday’s meeting, retired high school history teacher Chris Billingsle­y, said it honors Confederat­e soldiers’ sacrifices.

“It’s about remembranc­e of the men who fought and died through the Civil War for DeKalb County,” Billingsle­y told reporters outside the DeKalb Commission meeting. “It’s not about white supremacy, and it’s not about the Ku Klux Klan.”

The resolution passed by the DeKalb Commission requires the county government to determine if it actually owns the monument, then explore how it can be moved.

The county, so far, hasn’t been able to locate any records showing it accepted the monument after it was built by the A. Evans Camp of Confederat­e Veterans and the Agnes Lee Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, according to the resolution.

If the county doesn’t own the monument, the government could oust it from public property. But if a title attorney determines the monument belongs to the county, the government would have to justify how moving it complies with state law, or ask the Georgia General Assembly to change the law.

The resolution cites the violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., in August around the removal of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee, saying DeKalb’s monument creates a public safety concern.

“We’re in a hostile atmosphere right now,” said Commission­er Mereda Davis Johnson, the sponsor of the resolution. “We’re in an atmosphere where hate groups and segregatio­nists are being empowered. If that monument is being used to empower those groups, then I think it should be removed and placed in an appropriat­e location.”

Sara Patenaude, the co-founder of Hate Free Decatur, said the monument should be moved to a place where a more complete history of the Civil War can be told. Some residents say it should be surrounded by other monuments or exhibits to present a fuller account of the South’s history.

“We’re not trying to erase history, and we’re not trying to destroy a monument,” Patenaude said. “We’re trying to say that if you’re going to tell a story, you need to tell the whole story.”

The sole vote against the resolution came from Commission­er Nancy Jester, who said she’s concerned about taking down monuments connected to parts of history that society now finds objectiona­ble.

“I would rather see monuments contextual­ized rather than destroyed or moved,” Jester wrote in an emailed statement. “As the old courthouse is the home to the DeKalb History Center, it seems fitting and appropriat­e to keep this relic and others that give us a window into our past, including painful times, at that location.”

 ??  ?? “We have to recognize that this particular symbol cannot be held up” as an emblem of the community, Mawuli Davis, president of the Beacon Hill Branch of the NAACP, said. BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM
“We have to recognize that this particular symbol cannot be held up” as an emblem of the community, Mawuli Davis, president of the Beacon Hill Branch of the NAACP, said. BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Behind the old courthouse in Decatur Square sits this Confederat­e monument. Some of those who have lobbied for the monument to come down say it should be shuttled to a cemetery or a museum.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Behind the old courthouse in Decatur Square sits this Confederat­e monument. Some of those who have lobbied for the monument to come down say it should be shuttled to a cemetery or a museum.

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