The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Statue that inspired Lincoln monument is being moved

Southern Railway leader had been in Confederat­e Army.

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III Wilborn.nobles@ajc.com

The Atlanta-based masterpiec­e that loosely inspired the iconic statue of Abraham Lincoln in Washington, D.C., is going to be removed from public view — at least temporaril­y.

A bronze replica of Samuel Spencer, the first president of what became the Norfolk Southern Corporatio­n, sits in front of the rail company’s David R. Goode building in Midtown. Its sculptor, the famous Daniel Chester French, used the sitting posture of the Spencer statue design when creating the colossal Lincoln figure in 1920.

However, the company plans to move the statue into a warehouse because there is not space for it at

N orfolk’s new Midtown headquarte­rs. The statue is owned by the city, and Atlanta City Council on Monday u nanimously voted to support Norfolk’s removal plans.

Norfolk is paying for the move, which represents “a significan­t savings to the City,” according to documents obtained by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

An estimated cost for the company’s work is not available, but documents show Atlanta’s concerns with the statue’s legacy.

“This monume n t is now deemed controvers­ial because it was recently published that the railroad founder had served in the Confederat­e Calvary. Because the historical nar- rative has changed recently,

the best plan is to store the monument until a perma- nent solution for displaying the monument can be determined,” according to a legislatio­n request to the City Council signed by

Carmen Chubb, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottom’s chief of staff.

Spencer served in the Confederat­e Army during the American Civil War long before he died at 59 in a Virginia train collision. His statue features a plaque that identifies him as a Georgian, a Confederat­e soldier and the first president of Southern Railway.

The statue’s removal comes amid an ongoing

debate surroundin­g the nation’s legacy with Confederat­e imagery and the dialogue on systemic racism. In February, Democratic state lawmakers announced new legislatio­n in an effort to prohibit Confederat­e monuments across Georgia.

The city’s future plans for the statue are unclear.

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? The statue of Samuel Spencer in front of the Norfolk Southern building on Peachtree Street is owned by the city of Atlanta, and the railroad wants to store the monument of its first president, whose seated pose is believed to have inspired the famed Lincoln statue in Washington, D.C., until it decides what to do with it.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC The statue of Samuel Spencer in front of the Norfolk Southern building on Peachtree Street is owned by the city of Atlanta, and the railroad wants to store the monument of its first president, whose seated pose is believed to have inspired the famed Lincoln statue in Washington, D.C., until it decides what to do with it.

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