Times-Herald (Vallejo)

What’s left of Confederat­e monuments?

- By Elizabeth Castillo

As the U.S. reckons once again with racial inequities, it’s triggered a new round of calls to remove statues and monuments idolizing Confederat­e leaders and those who enslaved people. While Mississipp­i is retiring its Confederat­e battle flag and Alabama and Georgia join the movement to topple bronze statues, California is not without its vestiges of racism and oppression.

“You do have a deep link between Southern California and the Confederac­y,” said Ryan Keating, an associate professor of history at California State University, San Bernardino. “In the wake of the war, you have Southern veterans who relocate to Southern California en masse and when they arrive, they attempt to memorializ­e their service through the creation of monuments.”

Keating said these monuments frequently coincide with other historical events. For example, a number of Confederat­e monuments were erected in the early 1950s shortly after the Supreme Court ruling on Brown v. Board of Education which declared statesanct­ioned segregatio­n unconstitu­tional.

“These monuments and these memorials tend to be in very public places,” Keating said. “They coincide with moments in which African Americans seem to be gaining some political power or voice and they’re designed with a very specific intent of protecting a certain type of power and serving as a reminder of who’s in control.”

In California, a handful of highway markers and cemetery memorials remained visible but the Black Lives Matter movement quickly pushed the state to eradicate them completely. Some of the markers were erected by the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, a historical group dedicated to “honoring the memory of its Confederat­e ancestors” and labeled neo-Confederat­e by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The organizati­on still exists today.

“The United Daughters of the Confederac­y totally denounces any individual or group that promotes racial divisivene­ss or white supremacy,” says a statement by President General Nelma Crutcher on the organizati­on’s national homepage. “We are saddened that some people find anything connected with the Confederac­y to be offensive. Our Confederat­e ancestors were and are Americans. We as an Organizati­on do not sit in judgment of them nor do we impose the standards of the 19th century on Americans of the 21st century.”

Messages left with the California chapter and the national organizati­on were not returned.

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