The Palm Beach Post

House panel wants Bethune to be Fla.’s 2nd statue in D.C.

Black educator would replace Confederat­e officer.

- By Jim Turner

TALLAHASSE­E — A statue of civil-rights activist and educator Mary McLeod Bethune moved closer Tuesday to replacing a statue of a Confederat­e general in representi­ng Florida in the U.S. Capitol.

The House Government Accountabi­lity Committee voted 20-1, with Jacksonvil­le Republican Jay Fant opposed, to approve a measure (HB 139) that calls for a statue of Bethune to replace Confederat­e Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith in the National Statuary Hall.

Each state gets two representa­tives at the statuary hall, and Smith has represente­d Florida since 1922.

“The timing is right to pass this,” sponsor Patrick Henry, D-Daytona Beach, said after Tuesday’s committee meeting. “I think with all the controvers­y we’ve had with Charlottes­ville and the Confederat­e statues, it’s time to move forward.”

Fant, who is running for attorney general in 2018, said after the meeting that the Legislatur­e shouldn’t be involved in the statue-removal process.

“Messing with statues is a fool’s errand for the Legislatur­e,” Fant said. “I don’t think we should even remove any of the statues that we have, including the one that they’re moving to replace here . ... It’s one of those issues that I think truly creates division within communitie­s, this whole statue-removal business, and I don’t want to be part of all that.”

At least seven states have replaced representa­tives in the Hall since 2003, including Alabama, which in 2009 put author and activist Helen Keller in the place of Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry, a diplomat who served as an officer in the Confederat­e Army.

State Rep. Neil Combee, an Auburndale Republican who described Smith as a “great guy,” said Bethune’s achievemen­ts outweighed other nominees for the honor.

“It’s clear that her life was devoted to improving people’s lives,” Combee said. “There is no question. She may have been our own little version of Mother Teresa right here in the state of Florida when you look at her work.”

Bethune, who in 1904 founded what became Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach, held numerous roles, including serving as an adviser to President Franklin Roosevelt.

Henry said the university has offered to cover the cost of creating the statue and that Bethune would become the first African-American to be honored in the hall. Florida’s other representa­tive in the hall is John Gorrie, widely considered the father of air conditioni­ng.

Henry’s bill is filed for the 2018 legislativ­e session, which starts in January. Sen. Perry Thurston, D-Fort Lauderdale, filed a similar proposal (SB 472) Tuesday.

The West Point-educated Smith was born in St. Augustine but had few ties to the state as an adult.

The Legislatur­e voted in 2016 to replace the Smith statue during a nationwide backlash against Confederat­e symbols in the wake of the 2015 shooting deaths of nine African-American worshipper­s at a historic black church in Charleston, S.C.

However, lawmakers during the 2017 session did not reach agreement on whose likeness should replace Smith.

“I think Confederat­e statues like the one we’re trying to replace with this bill belong in a museum so that we can learn more from our past than glorifying it,” state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, an Orlando Democrat and member of the Government Accountabi­lity Committee, said Tuesday.

Democrats’ demands for a replacemen­t grew this summer in the wake of a white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., that turned deadly. A plan to remove a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee helped spur the Charlottes­ville rally.

At that time, Florida’s 11 congressio­nal Democrats signed identical letters to Gov. Rick Scott, House Speaker Richard Corcoran and Senate President Joe Negron calling for a special legislativ­e session on the statue issue.

During the 2017 session, the Senate advanced a measure in support of Bethune, but there was no House version. Instead, a bill was proposed in the House proposing the honor go to Everglades activist and writer Marjory Stoneman Douglas.

A panel known as the Great Floridians Committee last year nominated three possible candidates to replace Smith. In addition to Bethune and Douglas, the other nominee was Publix grocery store founder George Jenkins.

 ?? RICK MCKAY / COX NEWSPAPERS ?? A statue of Mary McLeod Bethune with two small children sits in Lincoln Park in Washington, D.C. Bethune, who founded Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach, may soon be honored by Florida in Statuary Hall.
RICK MCKAY / COX NEWSPAPERS A statue of Mary McLeod Bethune with two small children sits in Lincoln Park in Washington, D.C. Bethune, who founded Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach, may soon be honored by Florida in Statuary Hall.

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