Los Angeles Times

A new honoree in Baltimore park

A space that held a Confederat­e statue is now dedicated to Harriet Tubman.

- By Kevin Rector Rector writes for the Baltimore Sun.

BALTIMORE — More than 200 residents and elected leaders gathered in a tree-lined corner of a Baltimore park Saturday to rededicate the space, which had long venerated two Confederat­e generals, to the famed abolitioni­st and Undergroun­d Railroad conductor Harriet Tubman.

“We stand on the shoulders of this great woman,” said Ernestine Jones-Williams, 71, a Baltimore County resident and a Tubman family descendant who spoke on behalf of the family. “We are overwhelme­d. Overwhelme­d. Thank you, and God bless you.”

The ceremony in Wyman Park Dell, on the 105th anniversar­y of Tubman’s death, took place feet from the now-empty pedestal of a large, bronze, double-equestrian statue of Confederat­e Gens. Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, and officially renamed the space Harriet Tubman Grove.

The statue had stood in the park since 1948, but was removed in August amid a national debate over Confederat­e symbolism and monuments, and how they are viewed by those who see them as offensive reminders of the country’s racial history and those who proudly consider them a part of their Southern heritage.

The public reckoning over the placement and meaning of such statues in public spaces began in large part in 2015, after white supremacis­t Dylann Roof shot nine African Americans to death in a church in Charleston, S.C. Calls for change grew in August after a violent white supremacis­t rally to protest the planned removal of a statue of Lee in Charlottes­ville, Va., led to the death of a counter-protester.

Mayor Catherine Pugh’s administra­tion removed four Baltimore monuments with ties to the Confederac­y days after the Charlottes­ville rally in an unannounce­d overnight operation, citing “safety and security” concerns. The four were the Lee-Jackson monument, a monument to Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, the Confederat­e Soldiers and Sailors Monument and the Confederat­e Women's Monument.

At the event Saturday, city officials and local residents cited the events in Charleston and Charlottes­ville, but largely focused on more local efforts to have Baltimore’s statues removed, including a grassroots petition drive.

They said the removal of the statues has imbued the spaces where they once stood, such as the Harriet Tubman Grove, with their own symbolic power.

“Since the removal of the Lee-Jackson statue, this park has become a gathering place for city residents of all background­s to meet, talk and enjoy the location as a space that symbolizes hope and positive change,” said Ciara Harris, chief of staff to Baltimore Recreation and Parks Director Reginald Moore. “Harriet Tubman Grove will provide the city an opportunit­y to correct historic injustice to a Maryland native. Our city is properly recognizin­g an African American hero.”

City Councilwom­an Mary Pat Clarke called Tubman, who was born a slave on Maryland’s Eastern Shore but went on to lead many other enslaved people to freedom along the Undergroun­d Railroad, a “heroine and beacon for all ages.”

Marvin “Doc” Cheatham, a longtime local civil rights leader who has been working to get Tubman recognized in more official ways across the city for years, thanked the community for its work in renaming the grove.

“You did what needed to be done to say, ‘Yes, we need to move on,’ ” he said.

Jackson Gilman-Forlini, 28, who is studying how society re-contextual­izes monuments and memorials over time as part of a master’s degree program in historic preservati­on at Goucher College, said the rededicati­on was a great thing for the city. He served on the task force formed by Pugh last year to study the removal of the city’s Confederat­e monuments.

“Monuments are seen as permanent, sort of monolithic structures, but inherently their meanings change over time, and really the removal of these monuments was not so much about monuments in general, but about the kind of values that we as a society want to promote,” said Gilman-Forlini, who also works for the city as a historic preservati­onist. “This is now the next logical step in the process of asserting those values, those positive values of inclusion, of tolerance, of speaking out against prejudice.

“These kind of gatherings in many ways are much more powerful than new monuments may necessaril­y be, because these are about community action and about the experience of the individual working in a community to assert positive values,” he said. “In that way I think this is really the best thing that we could be doing right now as a means of healing past injustices.”

 ?? H.B. Lindsley Associated Press ?? “WE STAND on the shoulders of this great woman,” said a descendant of Harriet Tubman, the abolitioni­st leader, who died 105 years ago.
H.B. Lindsley Associated Press “WE STAND on the shoulders of this great woman,” said a descendant of Harriet Tubman, the abolitioni­st leader, who died 105 years ago.

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