Antelope Valley Press

City removes Civil war statue

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MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — Alabama’s port city removed a statue of a Confederat­e naval officer early Friday after days of protests over the police killing of George Floyd, with the mayor saying the monument was a “potential distractio­n” to focusing on the city’s future.

The bronze likeness of Admiral Raphael Semmes, which stood in a middle of a downtown street near the Mobile waterfront for 120 years, had become a flash point for protest in the Gulf Coast city. Vandalized during a demonstrat­ion this week and then cleaned by the city, it was removed overnight without any public notice.

Mayor Sandy Stimpson, in a string of messages sent on Twitter, said he ordered the removal. The decision to take down the statue wasn’t about Semmes or the monument itself, “and it is not an attempt to rewrite history,” he wrote.

“Moving this statue will not change the past. It is about removing a potential distractio­n so we may focus clearly on the future of our city,” Stimpson said.

Semmes was a Confederat­e commerce raider, sinking Union-allied ships during the Civil War. According to the Encycloped­ia of Alabama, he was jailed on treason charges in New York City before returning South after the war, and was later prohibited by U.S. authoritie­s from taking office as an elected judge in Mobile.

He devoted his later years to writing his memoirs and became a “Lost Cause” hero to Southerner­s who lamented the end of the Confederac­y. The statue was dedicated in 1900.

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