The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Norfolk Southern’s first president served in Confederat­e Army.

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III

Most people recognize Abraham Lincoln’s statue in Washington, D.C., but its lesser-known precursor exists in Atlanta.

A bronze replica of Samuel Spencer, the first president of what became the Norfolk Southern Corporatio­n, sits in front of the rail company’s David R. Goode building in Midtown. Its sculptor loosely mimicked the Spencer statue design when creating the colossal Lincoln figure in 1920.

But its presence is on borrowed time due to Spencer’s ties to the Confederac­y.

“This was put up in 1910,” artist Gregor Turk said. “That’s during Jim Crow, but … this is — I think — very different than a lot of the Confederat­e monuments that were put in place to intimidate.”

Although Atlanta owns the statue, documents obtained by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on show Norfolk owns the private property it sits upon. When the company sold the land to Cousins Properties in 2019, Norfolk did not create a site for the statue at the company’s new headquarte­rs.

“Once NSC leaves the Goode building, the statue’s current placement will no longer be appropriat­e,” according to Norfolk executive Patti Carroll in a letter to the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs last July.

On Monday, the Atlanta City Council is expected to vote on the statue’s relocation. Norfolk previously asked the mayor’s office for permission to relocate the statue at the company’s expense, records show.

Norfolk’s request to remove and store the statue in a Norfolk-owned warehouse represents “a significan­t savings to the City,” according to documents obtained by the AJC. The estimated cost is not listed.

Whatthe documents do show,

however, is Atlanta’s concern with the statue’s legacy.

“This monument is now deemed controvers­ial because it was recently published that the railroad founder had served in the Confederat­e Cavalry. Because the historical narrative has changed recently, the best plan is to store the monument until a permanent solution for displaying the monument can be determined,” according to a legislatio­n request to the City Council signed by Carmen Chubb, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottom’s chief of staff.

A Norfolk spokesman said in a statement that the company is pleased it finalized an agreement with the city to relocate the statue.

“Our state-of-the-art headquarte­rs building, now under constructi­on in Midtown, will feature new public art that represents and celebrates the future of our changing industry and company. At the request of the new ownership of the Goode building, and to allow the City to determine an appropriat­e, new location, we have agreed to house the Spencer statue temporaril­y at one of our warehouse facilities,” the statement says.

Spencer, who died at 59 in a Virginia train collision, previously served in the Confederat­e Army during the American Civil War, according to the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources.

Turk said Spencer was only 18 when the war interrupte­d his education. Spencer’s statue features a plaque that identifies him as a Georgian,

a Confederat­e soldier and the first president of Southern Railway. Turk said the Southern Railway Company employees paid for it’s creation.

The statue was repeatedly moved across Atlanta for decades before it reached Midtown.

The rail company’s decision today comes amid an ongoing debate surroundin­g the nation’s legacy with Confederat­e imagery and the dialogue on systemic racism. In February, Democratic state lawmakers announced new bills in an effort to prohibit Confederat­e monuments across Georgia.

Turk said Georgia needs to replace controvers­ial monuments to racism with memorials to women and people of color. At the same time, he said Spencer’s sculpture should be relocated somewhere with a “connection to railways,” or where people can learn the full context of Spencer’s life.

“He’s a Confederat­e soldier, but that’s not why the sculpture was erected,” Turk said. “It was erected because he was the president of the railway.”

 ?? Sitsin front the Norfolk JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? The statue of Samuel Spencer of Southern building on Peachtree Street. Atlanta owns the statue, and the company seeks permission to remove it.
Sitsin front the Norfolk JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC The statue of Samuel Spencer of Southern building on Peachtree Street. Atlanta owns the statue, and the company seeks permission to remove it.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Samuel Spencer statue is controvers­ial because the railroad founder served in the Confederat­e Cavalry.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Samuel Spencer statue is controvers­ial because the railroad founder served in the Confederat­e Cavalry.

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