Chattanooga Times Free Press

Confederat­e monument in Nashville park will remain

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

A Confederat­e monument will remain in one of Nashville’s most-visited public parks after the Tennessee Historical Commission on Friday rejected the city’s efforts to move it.

The commission, whose 24 voting members are appointed by Gov. Bill Lee, rejected a petition brought by Nashville parks officials to remove a life-sized statue of a Confederat­e soldier from Centennial Park, where it has sat across a field from an iconic replica of the Parthenon for more than a century.

The Metro Board of Parks and Recreation, the commission determined, failed to meet the burden of showing there was a need to move the bronze statue “based on historical or other compelling public interest.”

The law must be “liberally construed in favor of historic preservati­on,” the commission concluded.

The Private Confederat­e Soldier Monument was unveiled in 1909 during a reunion of a Confederat­e Veterans Associatio­n.

The statue has largely escaped public scrutiny over other Confederat­e monuments displayed in Tennessee public spaces, including the years-long controvers­y over the display in the Tennessee State Capitol of a bust of early Ku Klux Klan leader Nathan Bedford Forrest. The bust was removed in 2021.

In 2019, the bronze statue of the young, unnamed Confederat­e soldier was vandalized, with the words “they were racists” in red paint. Nashville park officials debated then moving the statue, but voted instead to add a marker providing historical context.

The marker was never added. The next year, after the deaths of George Floyd and Breana Taylor, the Metro Board of Parks and Recreation revisited the decision, with one board member calling the statue of the sitting soldier a “divisive symbol.” The board last year petitioned the historical commission for permission to remove it, but did not specify where it might go.

Macy Amos, Nashville’s attorney, argued Friday the monument may not be a “memorial” at all, which would remove it from the commission’s oversight. The statue was dedicated to the Lost Cause ideology, she argued, referring to a reinterpre­tation of the Civil War rather than a historical event or individual. Metro officials were also concerned about the possibilit­y of the statue again attracting vandalism.

H. Edward Phillips, an attorney representi­ng the Sons of Confederat­e Veterans Joseph E. Johnston Camp 28 — which opposed the removal — argued the monument was in fact dedicated to individual­s, noting that on it is inscribed the names of more than 500 soldiers, about half of whom had died at the time the memorial was erected.

The Tennessee Historical Commission has the authority to approve or deny petitions for waivers to the state’s Historic Preservati­on Act, which says that no memorial regarding a historic conflict, entity, event, figure or organizati­on on public property may be moved or otherwise disturbed. Read more at TennesseeL­ookout.com.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY ?? In 2019, people walk past a monument to Confederat­e soldiers in Centennial Park in Nashville.
AP PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY In 2019, people walk past a monument to Confederat­e soldiers in Centennial Park in Nashville.

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