Los Angeles Times

California breaks up with the Confederac­y. It’s about time

Most Civil War tributes in the state have finally been swept away.

- By Kevin Waite

Over the summer, California underwent a historical reckoning perhaps as comprehens­ive as any state in the nation. Activists toppled monuments to Confederat­es, to Spanish missionari­es, even to Union generals. Now the process is drawing to a close in a rather unspectacu­lar fashion — not because activists lack the initiative for further action, but because there are almost no monuments left to remove.

That California, a progressiv­e state more than 1,500 miles from the nearest major Civil War theater, would sweep away tributes to dead Confederat­es seems self-evident. Yet this summer’s rash of monument removals was the culminatio­n of a longfought and hard-won battle.

Until recently, California housed far more Confederat­e monuments and place names than any state beyond the South. Other free states contained at most a small handful of rebel tributes, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center’s extensive database. California, in contrast, establishe­d more than a dozen such markers over the course of the 20th century.

California­ns began fighting over the memory of the Civil War not long after Robert E. Lee surrendere­d the main rebel army in April 1865. The debate was especially intense in Los Angeles, home to a vocal base of secessioni­sts.

“The Civil War continued to rage” in postbellum Los Angeles, according to Horace Bell, a Union veteran who returned to Southern California shortly after the conflict. When Bell passed by, fellow white Angelenos often spat: “The idea … of a Los Angeles man of your stamp fighting on the side of the Blacks!” According to his own estimates, Bell wound up in as many as 40 brawls for his wartime loyalties. And in 1882, L.A. went so far as to elect a former Confederat­e army captain as mayor.

Over the coming decades, thousands of white Southern migrants arrived in California. Although they represente­d a dwindling proportion of the state’s overall population, they wielded outsized influence in the struggle over Civil War memory. They waged their campaigns through well-funded memorial associatio­ns, particular­ly the United Daughters of the Confederac­y.

In 1925, L.A.’s Confederat­e memorial associatio­ns erected the first rebel tribute on the West Coast. The monument, a 6-foot granite pillar in Hollywood Cemetery, saluted several dozen Confederat­e veterans who had moved to Southern California after the war. They were buried in the surroundin­g cemetery plot.

Several years later, the United Daughters of the Confederac­y turned a San Gabriel mansion into the first and only rebel veterans rest home outside the former slave states and territorie­s. They called it Dixie Manor. Some 500 people gathered to celebrate the home’s dedication in 1929.

Controvers­y had erupted in San Diego several years earlier, when Confederat­e devotees erected a monument to the Jefferson Davis Highway. It marked the western terminus of a proposed coast-to-coast road system named in honor of the rebel commander in chief.

Almost immediatel­y, Union veterans began protesting. Particular­ly galling was the fact that the monument sat directly in front of the U.S. Grant Hotel, which had been built by the war hero’s son. The veterans succeeded in having the Davis Highway monument hauled off in 1926, less than a year after it was installed.

But the Confederac­y would rise again in San Diego. Roughly three decades later, amid a national controvers­y over school desegregat­ion, the United Daughters of the Confederac­y reinstalle­d a marker to the Davis Highway. Once again, it stood across from the U.S. Grant Hotel, as if to taunt the old Union commander.

It was one of five highway markers to the rebel president in California. Shortly thereafter, San Diego named one of its schools for Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee — the second of its kind within the state. (The first was in Long Beach.) By hanging the name of a slaveholde­r on an educationa­l institutio­n, San Diego rose a not-so-subtle protest to the ongoing process of school integratio­n.

By the early 21st century, California boasted at least 18 Confederat­e monuments and place names. In addition to his highway markers, Davis also had a peak near Lake Tahoe named in his honor. And along with his two schools, Lee also had four redwood trees named after him. Additional­ly, California housed the township of Confederat­e Corners in Monterey County; a scenic network of hills named for the Confederat­e warship Alabama; a plaque to Robert S. Garnett, the first rebel general killed in the Civil War; and three large stone memorials to the common Confederat­e soldier in Hollywood, San Diego and Orange County.

The driving force behind California’s rebel landscape, the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, had 18 chapters in the state as recently as 1999. For comparison, Ohio and New York — the free states where, after California, the organizati­on was most active — had only three chapters each.

These monuments would, most likely, still be standing if not for a series of violent acts that finally focused public outrage on Confederat­e commemorat­ions. Three major flashpoint­s inspired an ongoing reckoning with the American past — the murder of nine worshipers at one of the nation’s oldest African American churches in 2015; the white supremacis­t rally around a statue to Robert E. Lee in Charlottes­ville, Va., two years later; and the killing of George Floyd in May.

As a result, in California there are no longer any schools named after Robert E. Lee, or peaks after Jefferson Davis, or memorials to Confederat­e soldiers. Most of the Davis Highway markers are gone as well. Although Lee’s trees still technicall­y bear the rebel general’s name — changing their designatio­n requires approval from Congress or the director of the National Park Service — identifyin­g signage has been removed.

After nearly a century of debate, California has nearly been purged of its Confederat­e tributes.

Yet perhaps the most surprising aspect of this history is not that these monuments finally fell during our long, hot summer of protest. It’s that they survived for as long as they did.

Kevin Waite is an assistant professor of history at Durham University in Britain and author of the forthcomin­g book “West of Slavery.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A LONG BEACH school that had been known as Robert E. Lee Elementary since 1898 dropped the Confederat­e general’s name in 2016. It is now named for Olivia Herrera, a local activist.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A LONG BEACH school that had been known as Robert E. Lee Elementary since 1898 dropped the Confederat­e general’s name in 2016. It is now named for Olivia Herrera, a local activist.

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