The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Forum: Why we need Confederat­e monuments

- By Caroline E. Janney Courtesy of The Washington Post

Since the horrific church shooting in Charleston, S.C., two years ago, calls to remove Confederat­e flags and monuments have swept the South from Virginia to Texas. Contrary to contempora­ry claims that chants to “take it down” are a product of liberal campaigns for political correctnes­s or a new target of the Black Lives Matter movement, contests over Civil War symbols and memorials have divided the country for more than 150 years.

Calls to “take it down” have been offered as a solution to modern race relations - a way to construct more inclusive communitie­s. But in removing monuments, we not only eliminate not memorials to the Confederac­y, but also erase the history of those who fought against the values the monuments claim to represent.

For many, the memory of the war proved as polarizing as the war itself. Bitter debates over the placement and meaning of monuments emerged as early as 1865 in the North and the South. And these debates revealed time after time that there has never been a single historical interpreta­tion of what the Civil War meant - for Unionists or Confederat­es, for black or white.

Recent monument controvers­ies, in particular, have focused on the character of the people whom they depict, such as memorials to Robert E. Lee. But these monuments reveal more about who built them and why they did so than the figure they propose to honor.

Consider, for example, the controvers­y stirred over a memorial erected not in the former Confederac­y to celebrate a military leader, but rather in a small Union town that honored a black man. In October 1931, descendant­s of Confederat­e veterans gathered in Harpers Ferry, W.Va., to unveil their memorial to Heyward Shepherd, a black man who died during the abolitioni­st John Brown’s 1859 raid. In 1867, former Confederat­es began calling for a memorial to Shepherd as a victim of Brown’s misguided attempt to destroy the South and incite civil war. For decades, nothing happened. But when the local black college dedicated a tablet to Brown in 1918, the United Daughters of the Confederac­y (UDC) renewed their efforts to reclaim the commemorat­ive landscape.

Although they discovered that Shepherd was a free man accidental­ly killed in the raid, they chose to celebrate him as a loyal and faithful slave who had refused to participat­e in Brown’s abolitioni­st plot. With the rising prominence of civil rights groups like the NAACP speaking out against white supremacy, this narrative of Shepherd offered an alternativ­e: a loyal black man who accepted his place in a segregated society.

The monument divided the African American community and exposed different political philosophi­es on how to confront the pervasive economic and social system of white supremacy. While some hoped that the monument might increase interracia­l harmony by stressing the fidelity of a black man, others expressed outrage with the UDC’s manipulati­on of history.

At the dedication, Pearl Tatten, the black music director and daughter of a Union soldier, unexpected­ly rose and offered a different narrative. Rather than framing John Brown as a radical abolitioni­st who killed a faithful slave, she heralded Brown as the valiant defender of freedom who “struck the first blow” against the tyranny of slavery for which her father and other Union soldiers fought.

Condemning the memorial as the “Uncle Tom Slave Monument,” black leaders and the black press followed her lead and launched blistering attacks. But they did not settle for words alone. If whites insisted upon “giving the Confederat­e point of view” in memorializ­ing a so-called faithful slave, African Americans would counter with their own. The following year, they dedicated another memorial to Brown - one that depicted him as a hero whose traits challenged acceptable black behavior in the Jim Crow South.

Despite continued opposition, the original stone monument to Shepherd remained. Forty years later it sparked renewed conflict between Confederat­e groups and the NAACP. Removed by the National Park Service (NPS) for renovation­s in 1976, the memorial was tucked away in storage. After an inquiry by the UDC, the NPS agreed to return it - if it was accompanie­d by interpreti­ve plaque that explained its controvers­ial history.

Both the UDC and the NAACP vehemently disagreed with this compromise. The UDC saw no need for a sign, while the NAACP saw no need for the memorial. Not wanting to exacerbate tensions, the park elected instead to return the stone memorial to the street but cover it with plywood.

For fourteen years, the memorial remained covered. When another round of queries forced the park to remove the plywood in 1994, administra­tors agreed only with the provision that an interpreti­ve sign be added giving the memorial’s history and a tribute to Brown written by civil rights activist W.E.B Du Bois.

Neither side was any happier with this compromise than they had been with the proposal 14 years earlier. Confederat­e heritage groups derided the need for an interpreti­ve sign. Monuments should speak for themselves, they declared. NAACP leaders hoped that the monument might be dumped in the Potomac River, castigatin­g the Confederat­e heritage groups for implying that Shepherd and “thousands of other” African Americans supported the Confederac­y.

Today the Shepherd memorial still stands in its inconspicu­ous spot along Potomac Street. And while its inscriptio­n is at the very least misleading, its presence - along with the NPS plaque - offers valuable lessons about the contested nature of Civil War memory.

If the NPS had not returned the Shepherd monument and provided the interpreti­ve sign, it would have overlooked the African American activists who fought to reclaim their history of the Civil War as part of their quest for equal citizenshi­p. In fact, it would be easier to forget that the Civil War’s legacy has always been contentiou­s. But the war and its symbols have always held different meanings for different groups, and confrontin­g that history is imperative.

As New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu asked in his May address on the removal of that city’s Confederat­e monuments, how should an African-American mother or father explain to their child who Robert E. Lee was and why he towered above the city’s landscape?

Landrieu’s removal of the statues, however, does precisely what he rails against: It omits the past. Empty pedestals are just that: void of meaning all together.

The stone sentinels that dot our landscape serve as artifacts of the past, as evidence of where we have been as a nation. Of where we might yet go. And they offer us the opportunit­y - if we will only take it - to question why more than 150 years after the Civil War, so much divisivene­ss yet remains.

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