The Guardian (USA)

Alabama city told to keep Confederat­e street name or face $25,000 fine

- Edward Helmore

Alabama’s capital city of Montgomery is facing legal action or a $25,000 fine for changing the name of a street bearing the name of a Confederat­e president for a prominent civil rights lawyer.

The state’s Republican attorney general acted after Montgomery city council voted to switch Jeff Davis Avenue, named for Jefferson Davis, to Fred D Gray Avenue, the 91-year-old lawyer who represente­d Rosa Parks and others in cases that challenged the state’s segregatio­n practices.

Gray, whom Martin Luther King Jr called “the chief counsel for the protest movement”, grew up on the street and became one of the first African Americans elected as legislator­s in Alabama since Reconstruc­tion.

Across the US, in the wake of the rise of the Black Lives Matter racial justice movement, there has been an increase in efforts to take down statues of figures linked to racism and slavery. But there has also been a widespread backlash, especially among conservati­ves and Republican­s.

Alabama’s 48th attorney general, Steve Marshall, has written to Montgomery officials saying the city had violated a state law protecting Confederat­e monuments and other longstandi­ng memorials and must pay a $25,000 fine by 8 December, “otherwise, the attorney general will file suit on behalf of the state”.

Montgomery’s mayor, Steven Reed, the first African American to serve in the post, hit back, saying switching the name was the right thing to do.

“It was important that we show, not only our residents here, but people from afar that this is a new Montgomery,” Reed told the Associated Press, adding that the name change was his idea.

“We want to honor those heroes that have fought to make this union as perfect as it can be. When I see a lot of the Confederat­e symbols that we have in the city, it sends a message that we are focused on the lost cause as opposed to those things that bring us together under the Stars and Stripes.”

Alabama’s 2017 Memorial Preservati­on Act, enacted after cities across the nation began to remove Confederat­e monuments, forbids the removal or alteration of monuments and memorials – including a memorial street or memorial building – that have stood for more than 40 years.

Montgomery, sometimes referred to as the “Cradle of the Confederac­y” because the alliance was formed there in 1861 and served as the first Confederat­e capital, was also key to the civil rights movement a century later, including the Montgomery bus boycott.

Several Alabama cities have opted to take down Confederat­e monuments and pay the $25,000 fine, including Huntsville, AKA Rocket City, where the US space program was originally centered, that voted for the removal of a memorial to an unnamed Confederat­e soldier last year.

 ?? Photograph: Julie Bennett/Getty Images ?? The civil rights attorney Fred Gray, centre, his wife Carol, left, and Montgomery’s mayor, Steven Reed, attend a ceremony on 26 October in which Jeff Davis Avenue was renamed Fred D Gray Avenue.
Photograph: Julie Bennett/Getty Images The civil rights attorney Fred Gray, centre, his wife Carol, left, and Montgomery’s mayor, Steven Reed, attend a ceremony on 26 October in which Jeff Davis Avenue was renamed Fred D Gray Avenue.

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