San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

West Point aims at Confederat­e campus symbols

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK — Before turning against the U.S. military to command the Confederat­e army, Robert E. Lee served as the superinten­dent of West Point, the hallowed military academy that produced patriots like Ulysses Grant, Douglas MacArthur and Dwight Eisenhower.

But in the coming days, the storied academy will take down a portrait of Lee dressed in his Confederat­e uniform from its library, where it has been hanging since the 1950s and place it in storage. It will also remove the stone bust of the Civil War’s top southern general at Reconcilia­tion Plaza. And a quote from Lee will be stripped from the academy’s Honor Plaza.

The moves are part of a Department of Defense directive issued in October ordering the academy to address racial injustice and do away with installati­ons that “commemorat­e or memorializ­e the Confederac­y.”

That includes three bronze panels, measuring 11 feet tall and 5 feet wide, that depict significan­t events and figures in U.S. history, including Benjamin Franklin and Clara Barton. But the plaques, dedicated in 1965, not only featured Lee and other supporters of the Confederac­y but an image of an armed man in a hood, with “Ku Klux Klan” written below.

The congressio­nal Naming Commission, which initiated the changes at the academy, noted “there are clearly ties in the KKK to the Confederac­y.”

In a message posted on the academy’s website, Lt. Gen. Steve Gilland, the academy’s superinten­dent, said it would begin complying with the commission’s recommenda­tions during the holiday break. “We will conduct these actions with dignity and respect,” he said.

The United States Military Academy, as West Point is officially known, was establishe­d in 1809 along the bank of the Hudson River in upstate New York. The school has about 4,600 cadets, two-thirds of them white and about 13% Black, according to federal data.

West Point was not the only installati­on under scrutiny by

the congressio­nal commission. It also recommende­d that eight other installati­ons address symbols of the racist past. The U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., renamed buildings that memorializ­ed Confederat­e admirals or those who sought to perpetuate Black enslavemen­t.

More than a half-dozen of the commission’s recommenda­tions for West Point involve Lee, who graduated second in his class in 1829 and later served as

superinten­dent.

The commission recommende­d that Lee Barracks, Lee Road, Lee Gate, Lee Housing Area and Lee Area Child Developmen­t Center all be renamed.

The report said Lee’s armies “were responsibl­e for the deaths of more United States soldiers than practicall­y any other enemy in our nation’s history.”

Two other Confederat­e officers in the commission’s crosshairs were West Point grads

P.G.T. Beauregard and William Hardee. The panel called for Beauregard Place and Hardee Place to be renamed.

The commission noted West Point began installing Confederat­e memorials in the 1930s, saying it did so under pressure from the “Lost Cause” movement that sought to recast the causes of the Civil War and depict those who fought for the Confederac­y as deserving of honor for their sacrifices.

 ?? Nancy Kennedy/Getty Images ?? The United States Military Academy at West Point in New York is removing Confederac­y tributes over the holiday break after recommenda­tions from the congressio­nal Naming Commission.
Nancy Kennedy/Getty Images The United States Military Academy at West Point in New York is removing Confederac­y tributes over the holiday break after recommenda­tions from the congressio­nal Naming Commission.

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