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Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy (Third edition)

Although the Civil War ended more than 150 years ago, 2,089 Confederate memorials can still be found throughout the United States and its territories.[1]

Whose Heritage Third Edition report cover
Click image to view the third edition of the Whose Heritage? report.

Despite these numbers, there has been progress in removing Confederate symbols of hate and white supremacy. Public opinion is changing as more people learn about the cause of the Civil War鈥攕lavery鈥攁nd the motivations behind the dedication of Confederate memorials.听 Comparing polling of registered Georgia voters in 2018 and 2021 demonstrates that support for Confederate memorial removal has increased. Moreover, when myths about the 鈥溾 are dispelled and people are taught that heritage groups and white Southerners erected Confederate monuments in response to Reconstruction and during the Jim Crow era to venerate the white supremacist values of the Confederacy, support for monument removal increases.[2] These encouraging findings suggest that a deeper understanding of the past can facilitate a future free of Confederate symbols of hate.

Download the Whose Heritage? report (PDF)

John B. Castleman Monument
The John B. Castleman Monument 鈥 removed from Louisville, Kentucky, on June 8, 2020 鈥 is one of more than 200 memorials taken down since George Floyd's murder. (Credit: Melissa Lyttle)

Executive Summary

This Third Edition of Whose Heritage? builds upon and expands the first and second editions.[3] In 2015, after nine Black worshippers at the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina were murdered by a white supremacist gunman who had previously been photographed with Confederate iconography, the 澳彩开奖 launched a project to identify Confederate memorials, compiling a comprehensive and publicly accessible database that accompanied the 2016 Whose Heritage? report. Our data showed that Confederate monuments were erected in the wake of Reconstruction during the Jim Crow era, which reinforced arguments historians made about how Confederate memorials were part of an organized propaganda campaign to promote the Lost Cause and venerate the white supremacist values of the Confederacy.

After the 2017 Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia prompted many communities to grapple anew with the Confederate memorials in their presence, 澳彩开奖 reissued Whose Heritage? in 2018. The second edition had an updated count of Confederate memorials, a map, and a major methodological change: tracking whether a monument was live, relocated, renamed, or removed. More recently, protests over the murder of George Floyd sparked the removal, relocation, or renaming of at least 200 memorials.[4] This has shifted the focus from understanding to action; rather than just understanding when and why memorials were erected, forces facilitating memorial removal became more active. Situating the recent activism within a longer historical context provides a fuller account of why this moment (and not others) enabled the removal of so many memorials while simultaneously honoring Black activists working on monument removal in the past.[5]

Illustration street sign with Confederate names
Illustration: Zoe Van Djik

This report has five parts in addition to our public map and dataset. The introduction details the long history of Black protest over Confederate memorials, drawing on scholarship to help contextualize our data, and argues that Confederate monument removal offers an important education in democracy and civic participation.[6] Next, the methodology section explains how 澳彩开奖 works in collaboration with communities to source our data, and how we make decisions about what to include (and exclude) from our database. The analysis section outlines five main conclusions drawn from the data. Action items provide suggestions for how you can work to remove Confederate symbols from your community. Finally, the conclusion looks ahead to how we can make our collective history.

1. Most Confederate memorials are not what are commonly referred to as monuments.

Although there are 723 live monuments in 澳彩开奖鈥檚 database as of January 20, 2022, there are more roadways (741) honoring Confederates than there are monuments. Together with schools (201), counties and municipalities (104), parks (38), buildings (51), holidays (22), military bases (10), commemorative license plates (7), bodies of water (6), and bridges (6), these places do important cultural work to reinforce white supremacy.

Graphic showing number of things honoring Confederates

2. Confederate memorials are not limited to the South.

While the vast majority of Confederate memorials today are located in former Confederate States (1,910), Confederate memorials can be found in Union States and Washington, DC (44), border states (102), states that were not yet admitted to the Union (30), and even Puerto Rico (1).

3. The popularity of different kinds of Confederate memorials changes over time, reflecting shifting methods of intimidating Black communities.

Most Confederate monuments were erected in the period following Reconstruction and during Jim Crow. After World War II, the Confederate battle flag took on new meaning as a symbol of white supremacy, .[7] Schools were largely named after Confederates in the period following the Supreme Court鈥檚 1954 decision in , which ended racial segregation in public schools. In each instance, though the specific type of memorial changed, the intent 鈥 to terrorize Black Americans 鈥 remained the same.[8]

4. Recent efforts to remove Confederate memorials offer insights that can assist social justice advocates working to create fairer, freer, and more just public spaces.

Since the Charleston church massacre in 2015, activists have successfully renamed, relocated, and removed 377 Confederate memorials from communities across the United States. This progress draws on the long history of Black activism contesting Confederate memorials. Despite the passage of draconian preservation laws over the past decade, communities have found creative ways to remove symbols of hate from public space.

5. The top three individuals commemorated are Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, and Stonewall Jackson.

Most Confederate memorials in the United States today don鈥檛 commemorate a specific individual (722). But of the ones that do, Robert E. Lee (235) is most frequently honored, followed by Jefferson Davis (144), and Thomas Jonathan 鈥淪tonewall鈥 Jackson (121).

Along the way, the report features artwork and poetry by artists who are using visual narratives and verse to find alternative ways of challenging the Lost Cause ideology. 澳彩开奖 believes that there is no 鈥渙ne size fits all鈥 approach to fighting the legacy of slavery, and we hope that combining multiple approaches in one report will serve as an inspiration to activists, scholars, journalists, creatives, and others committed to eradicating hate and white supremacy.

澳彩开奖 recognizes that removing Confederate memorials is, in and of itself, not enough. The legacy of the Confederacy is far more enduring than any memorial ever could be. This is demonstrated clearly by the fact that systemic racial inequality is endemic to our society and is built into our very institutions. The devastating impact of the pandemic on Black communities in the United States is one of the many ways in which the legacy of slavery and the Confederacy has manifested itself. Destroying these monuments will not erase the legacy of slavery. But abolishing these memorials is a first and essential step in combating the white supremacist values of the Confederacy, while drawing on historical memory to facilitate community healing.

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Statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee removed in Richmond, Virginia
Crews work to remove one of the country's largest remaining monuments to the Confederacy, a towering statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue, Virginia. (Credit: Steve Helber)

Introduction

In 1954, when Mrs. Goldie Kingston heard that Harry C. Seibold wanted to name his Richmond, Virginia baseball team The Confederates, she told reporter Lee Barrow of the Afro-American that she had no interest in watching games so long as the team retained the name.[9] The waitress was among 35 people queried by the newspaper, and only two respondents supported the name change. Living in the former capital of the Confederacy in the shadows of Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, Matthew Fontaine Maury, Stonewall Jackson, and J.E.B. Stuart on Richmond鈥檚 , the Black community was all too aware of what the name symbolized.[10]

The name was 鈥渞otten,鈥 according to Charlie Grant. 鈥淚nstead of honoring what happened nearly 100 years ago,鈥 he said, 鈥渨e should be looking forward.鈥 Others made similar objections based on historical context, calling the name 鈥渁 throwback to 1865鈥 and 鈥渁ll right for the 19th century, but inappropriate now.鈥 Clarence H. Fields drew on the contemporary context 鈥 鈥 noting that he鈥檇 be willing to attend the games despite the proposed name 鈥渋f they give colored players a chance.鈥[11] One person seemed to sum up the sentiments of many when calling the decision 鈥渁 slap in the face.鈥

Illustration Robert E. Lee statue
Illustration: Zoe Van Dijk

While the historical record does not tell us why the team was ultimately named the Richmond Virginians (and whether the objections of the city鈥檚 Black residents played any role in that decision), the proposed name clearly conjured the legacy of slavery for the city鈥檚 Black residents.[12] Their reactions to Confederate memorials are part of a much longer tradition of Black Americans protesting, challenging, and removing Confederate memorials from public space.

As historian , 鈥淎lthough some people may regard the vehement arguments over these symbols and the calls for removal of monuments as a new part of twenty-first-century life, protests over the display of Confederate monuments and emblems go back decades.鈥[13] Thus, calls on communities to remove symbols of hate is not an imposition of our contemporary values on the people of the past or an attempt to erase history. Rather, it holds communities accountable to Kingston, Grant, Fields, and other Black Americans whose protests go back decades and who clearly understood that Confederate memorials falsely valorize a government that fought to preserve the right to enslave Black people.

Protests over Confederate monuments have garnered much popular and scholarly attention, and this report is attentive to how Black Americans have protested both monuments and memorials. Here and elsewhere, 澳彩开奖 , following historian Seth Bruggeman who explains,

鈥淢onument,鈥 [鈥 usually refers to a commemorative structure or edifice, whereas 鈥渕emorial鈥 applies to almost anything鈥攊ncluding buildings, books, roads, stadiums鈥攖hat recalls the dead or the experience of profound loss. The Lincoln Memorial, in Washington, D.C., is [...] a monument, because the structure itself functions as a well of national regard for Lincoln鈥檚 sacrifice and vision. Across town, however, only sports fans likely consider the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium a monument. Its tribute to Kennedy鈥檚 memory is in name alone.[14]

Bruggeman notes that these categories are fluid, but they offer useful guidelines for differentiating between monuments like obelisks, statues, plinths, and pedestals and other memorials including schools, roadways, buildings, flags, military bases, parks, bodies of water, bridges, roadways, and even sports teams like the Confederates.[15]

Text: To date, 409 Confederate memorials have been removed, relocated, or renamed.

This report draws on scholarship to contextualize data showing the number of Confederate memorial removals, relocations, and renamings.[16] To date, 409 Confederate memorials have been removed, relocated, or renamed, and another 24 are pending. However, these figures do not capture the long history of activism surrounding Confederate memorial removal.[17] Nor do they reflect the larger context informing these removals; communities frequently remove Confederate memorials in response to heinous acts of violence committed against Black Americans.

As early as 1870, before most Confederate monuments were built, Frederick Douglass was forewarning the public about their impact. In a piece for the , he notes, 鈥淢onuments to the 鈥榣ost cause鈥 will prove monuments of folly, both in the memories of a wicked rebellion which they must necessarily perpetuate, and in the failure to accomplish the particular purpose had in view by those who build them. It is a needless record of stupidity and wrong.鈥[18] Douglass recognized that Confederate monuments were part of a campaign to erase the role that slavery played in the Civil War, drawing attention to the traitorous acts of the Confederacy. His prescient words are remarkable for both their accuracy and because he spoke in a time when Black men were for challenging the established racial order.[19]

Black Americans also spoke out against proposed statues to 鈥渇aithful slaves,鈥 a pernicious myth that implied enslaved people would rather remain faithful to their masters than be free.[20] Among the most famous examples was the United Daughters of the Confederacy鈥檚 proposal to erect a statue to the near on Massachusetts Avenue in Washington, D.C.[21] On Feb. 28, 1923, when the U.S. Senate approved bill S. 4119 (which called for the creation of a statue to the mammy figure), African Americans objected to this offensive portrayal.[22] The Black press 鈥 including the St. Louis Argus, the Chicago Defender, the Baltimore Afro-American, and the Washington Tribune 鈥 voiced their strong opposition to the bill in editorials and cartoons, and the NAACP opposed the bill in a letter to the Senate. Their activism was effective in shifting public opinion, and the bill never made it to the House floor. Like other Confederate monuments never built, it was Black activism that prevented this racist depiction from being erected.[23]

The speeches given at the dedication ceremonies for Confederate memorials underscore why African Americans reacted so strongly to these monuments in their communities. For example, the given by white businessman Julian Carr for the Silent Sam statue at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill graphically exposes his investment in white supremacy[24]:

The present generation, I am persuaded, scarcely takes note of what the Confederate soldier meant to the welfare of the Anglo Saxon race during the four years immediately succeeding the war, when the facts are, that their courage and steadfastness saved the very life of the Anglo Saxon race in the South 鈥 When 鈥渢he bottom rail was on top鈥 all over the Southern states, and to-day, as a consequence the purest strain of the Anglo Saxon is to be found in the 13 Southern States 鈥 Praise God.
[ 鈥 One hundred yards from where we stand, less than ninety days perhaps after my return from Appomattox, I horse-whipped a negro wench until her skirts hung in shreds, because upon the streets of this quiet village she had publicly insulted and maligned a Southern lady, and then rushed for protection to these University buildings where was stationed a garrison of 100 Federal soldiers. I performed the pleasing duty in the immediate presence of the entire garrison, and for thirty nights afterwards slept with a double-barrel shot gun under my head.

The speakers and sponsors at dedication ceremonies frequently expressed their commitment to asserting white supremacy and racial terror, a message that continues to speak clearly to both Black and white audiences through the actual monuments.

Battalion of Black Army soldiers stands in formation
An Army battalion of Black soldiers, standing in formation and holding the American flag in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, (1939-1945). Black soldiers still fought in segregated units during World War II and strongly objected to the use of the Confederate flag in the armed forces during the war. (Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

And it wasn鈥檛 just monuments. As Matthew Delmont has argued, Black troops strongly objected to the use of the Confederate flag in the armed forces during World War II, noting the hypocrisy of displaying the flag of a government that fought against the United States.[25] During the Civil Rights movement, Black students in Thomaston, Georgia objected to attending a school named after Robert E. Lee, protesting the name and other issues surrounding integration.[26] These protests and objections, like those made against the Virginia Confederates baseball team, illustrate how Black Americans have long objected to Confederate memorials. And that activism laid the groundwork for the removals taking place today.

Examining Confederate memorials from a historical and a contemporary lens has important lessons to teach us about democracy. Their very existence reminds us how easily white supremacy can erode our democracy and can subvert this country鈥檚 promise to provide liberty and justice for all. A nation that truly believed in the equality of all people and that was committed to realizing the , , and Amendments would have never allowed these shrines to white supremacy to be built.

Text that reads: Democracy only works when people are actively engaged, and the process of removing a Confederate monument galvanizes people to do so.

That Confederate monuments are is no accident.[27] And it鈥檚 not just monuments that convey white supremacy. Schools were named after Confederates to signal opposition to federal integration mandates. Roadways named after Confederates reinforced residential segregation. Confederate battle flags were raised over state houses in and Alabama.[28] Moreover, and incorporated elements of the Confederate flag in their state flags.[29] These are clear government endorsements of the values of the Confederacy. In short, Confederate memorials offer a cautionary tale about the failures of democracy, its fragility, and how our laws and landscapes have actively thwarted the promise of equal protection.

Confederate memorials also teach us about civic engagement, and how ordinary Americans have effectively challenged the pervasive and pernicious Lost Cause ideology by exercising their rights and demanding that our institutions live up to their stated democratic ideals. Democracy only works when people are actively engaged, and the process of removing a Confederate memorial galvanizes people to do so. Activists who organize against Confederate memorials, many of whom are people of color, do so at great personal risk. Often for reasons beyond their control, activists cannot remove a specific memorial. However, we all benefit from their efforts to create places that are more just because Confederate memorial removal offers a Tocquevillian education in democracy, providing social justice activists with the training and skills that will prove useful in other forms of civic involvement.

Activism surrounding memorial removal requires exercising our first amendment rights to speech, the press, and assembly. When activists tweet, post to social media, write letters to the editor, and give interviews to media outlets, they are practicing freedom of expression. For example, when current students at Wheeler High School in Cobb County, Georgia post announcements to their , asking their community to put pressure on the school board to change the name of their school, they exercise their freedom of expression.[30] Similarly, organizing a peaceful protest to draw attention to the hypocrisy of honoring Confederates in a public space is a form of practicing freedom of assembly. The , Florida held a rally last summer that helped convince the school board to change six names.[31] While the outcome in this case was favorable, their actions also reinforced the right to assemble peacefully.听

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The benefits of Confederate memorial removal extend beyond strengthening the First Amendment. It also provides an education in the law. Because issues about monument removal are fundamentally about property, most activists get an unofficial education in property law. Other laws on the may also apply.[32] For example, the Founder and Executive Director of Project Say Something, Camille Bennett, how efforts to remove a Confederate monument from Florence, Alabama involve engaging with laws related to the monument鈥檚 ownership, and its future.[33]

Six states have preservation laws: Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Despite these draconian laws, careful readings and interpretations have allowed for the removal of some Confederate memorials. For example, when the city of Wilmington, North Carolina removed two Confederate monuments in August 2020, they cited , an exception permitted under North Carolina鈥檚 law.[34] Unsurprisingly, there has been political retribution for using these legal loopholes. After the city of Memphis, Tennessee sold a park with a statue of Nathan Bedford Forrest to a non-profit that swiftly removed the monument, the legislature amended Tennessee鈥檚 Heritage Protection Act to [35]

People hold signs calling for removal of Confederate monument in Columbus, Mississippi
John Lewis, left, and Sonniah Ramirez hold signs calling for the removal of the Confederate monument that stands on the Lowndes County Courthouse lawn in Columbus, Mississippi. (Credit: Claire Hassler/The Commercial Dispatch/AP Images)

In addition to deepening their knowledge of the law, activists also engage with and participate in the legislative process, the branch of government where people have the most direct say over the laws that govern them. Activists can challenge unjust laws that protect Confederate memorials by introducing new legislation that can overturn the old rules. In some cases, advocates of Confederate memorial removal run for or hold elected office. For example, Rep. Kabir Karriem worked with leaders in his community to .[36] Learning how to interpret, challenge, and engage with the legislature produces more informed, active, and engaged citizens. Racial justice advocates carry on the legacy of Black activists who have long worked to remove symbols of hate even when they were barred from formal political channels.

Beyond the legislature, the process of Confederate memorial removal often involves engaging with and learning about the judiciary鈥攖he branch of government responsible for interpreting and determining the legality of the law. In many communities, even after an elected body or official has voted to remove a Confederate monument, heritage groups bring cases against the state that result in long, protracted legal battles. And while this unnecessary action stalls the removal process, it also provides an education in how the legal system works: how lawyers build cases and marshal evidence, and how judges interpret case law to resolve disputes between different parties. For example, activist groups who successfully advocated for the removal of the Confederate monument from the town square in Decatur, Georgia had to wait over a year after the monument was removed for a judge to reaffirm that it was lawfully removed, dismissing a lawsuit that sought to restore it.[37] Closely following the outcome of the case provides instruction in navigating the legal system, a lesson which extends far beyond Confederate memorials.

Finally, Confederate memorials teach us how the past informs our current moment, and how historical tools and methods can be used to advance social justice. People from across the United States鈥攁lmost all of whom lack formal historical training鈥攈ave shared their incredibly rich primary sources with 澳彩开奖. Their archives document the racism fueling white Southerners who erected Confederate memorials as well as the Black activists who have long challenged symbols of hate and oppression. Many of these stories are intensely local and are not housed in traditional archival settings. Nonetheless, their research rivals (and in some cases exceeds) that of professional historians. Effectively mobilizing historical evidence allows activists to make more persuasive arguments to the legislature, the judiciary, and the public about how the past informs inequality in our current moment and provides a fuller understanding of our collective history.

Thus, 澳彩开奖 considers all campaigns to remove Confederate symbols鈥攂oth historic and contemporary鈥攁 success in some way regardless of whether they achieve the intended outcome. This process provides activists with skills, tools, and resources that are broadly applicable to all social and racial justice movements. 澳彩开奖 maintains that our nation鈥檚 commitment to equality will continue to ring hollow until every Confederate memorial is removed. But we privilege both process and outcome, honoring the activists who objected to Confederate memorials when they were barred from the democratic process.

The contributions of women like Goldie Kingston and the many other anonymous people who have questioned and fought the presence of Confederate memorials in their communities cannot be captured by a statistic and is not always reflected in our database. But their actions have helped make our democracy stronger, inspiring us to fully exercise our rights and demand that our country lives up to its ideals.

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Black Lives Matter supporters at statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Virginia
Black Lives Matter supporters at statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee in Richmond, Virginia. (Credit: Steve Helber)

Methodology

Since 澳彩开奖 first put out its call for information on Confederate monuments in 2015, the Whose Heritage? database has been a collaborative effort between researchers at 澳彩开奖 and the general public.[38] While the goal of the Whose Heritage? database is to help individuals and communities identify Confederate symbols, this collaborative methodology reinforces the organization鈥檚 mission to work in partnership with communities to dismantle white supremacy and advance a more inclusive democracy. 澳彩开奖 defines method as the sources, guidelines, and processes that make up the Whose Heritage? database and report.

The Whose Heritage? database has benefitted from the exhaustive research and documentation of people across the United States. Between the publication of the first and second editions, over 800 people submitted memorials for consideration. In addition to augmenting the dataset, input from the public shapes how Confederate memorials are tracked. Initially, 澳彩开奖 did not track the status of memorials or note whether a memorial was live, removed, relocated, pending, or renamed. When individuals, journalists, and local officials pointed out that some memorials had recently been removed, 澳彩开奖 responded by adding categories reflecting a memorial鈥檚 status. Publicizing the raw data encourages further collaboration; the Whose Heritage? database invites scholars, journalists, and the public to use the data to create narratives that educate broad audiences on how the history of the Confederacy continues to impact the contemporary landscape. In short, a collaborative methodology begets the production of even more collaborative research, stories, and reports.听

Illustration of Confederate monument
Illustration: Zoe Van Dijk

Adopting a collaborative method also means that the Whose Heritage? database is constantly changing. Fluctuations in the total number of memorials indicates public engagement with the database and ongoing activism surrounding memorial removals. Because the information is obtained from official and unofficial sources (for example, Waymarking relies on users to upload information) duplications and other inaccuracies occur. Moreover, the database is not comprehensive, and as new memorials are discovered they are added to the database. The public鈥檚 input in finding and correcting mistakes has made the database stronger, and community input will continue to improve this resource.

In addition to the methodological guidelines outlined below, 澳彩开奖 uses cultural history as method. Cultural history uses texts to study change over time.[39] Through of websites, material culture, and archival sources, 澳彩开奖 researchers seek to understand the context in which a memorial was produced.[40] Examining when the memorial was dedicated, who sponsored it, where it was located, and how it was interpreted provides insight into what the memorial meant, and how that meaning continues to inform the present. Historically marginalized communities鈥 interpretations of Confederate memorials are given primary consideration, and determinations about what is included in and excluded from the database are made based on context.

For example, cultural history helps to explain why so many schools were named after Confederates in the wake of Brown v. Board. In most cases, primary source information on the exact motivation for naming a school after a Confederate is not available. Coupling research on when the school was named and where it was located with secondary research鈥攈ow Confederate heritage groups intentionally used primary and secondary education as a way to inculcate the Lost Cause ideology to the next generation, how monuments fell out of fashion in the 1950s while 鈥渓iving memorials鈥 came into vogue, how Black Americans objected to attending schools named after Confederates, and finally how white Southerners resolutely objected to integration鈥攁llows researchers to determine that schools named after Confederates were part of a larger propaganda campaign to promote the Lost Cause.[41]

Total Number of Live Confederate Memorials in Each State

Map marked with number of Confederate memorials in each state
Total number of Confederate memorials in each state. (Click on map to view full interactive)

Interactive map: Full view for locations of Confederate memorials

In some instances, primary sources are not available to confirm whether a memorial honors a Confederate, or somebody else. While 澳彩开奖 has reasonable confidence that a memorial named Robert E. Lee or Jefferson Davis is honoring the Confederate general and president, respectively, other times a memorial is only named 鈥淟ee鈥 or 鈥淒avis.鈥 Because these are common last names, without primary source evidence it鈥檚 nearly impossible to confirm whether these memorials honor Confederates. Therefore, 澳彩开奖 relies on the context鈥攚hen a memorial was dedicated and where it was located鈥攖o determine whether the memorial belongs in the database. The public can help to augment the database by sending 澳彩开奖 primary source documentation to confirm a memorial鈥檚 origins, even (and most especially) if this evidence helps correct inaccuracies in the database.

While it鈥檚 impossible to ever truly know the thoughts or ideas of people who lived in the past, studying the larger context in which memorials were dedicated promotes understanding of the dominant beliefs and ideologies of the time. 澳彩开奖 is confident that the Confederate symbols in the database cannot be understood outside of white supremacy because of the careful consideration given to the context in which they were produced.

Adopting cultural history as a method requires remaining attentive to change over time. Meaning and interpretation are not static; how a memorial was interpreted in one place at one time might differ from how the very same memorial was interpreted just a few years later. The monument to Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia symbolized racism to many, but when the base was transformed into following the murder of George Floyd, for some the meaning changed; it became a symbol of resistance and transformation. Therefore, cultural history requires taking a nuanced approach that balances competing interpretations, meanings, and ideas.[42] 澳彩开奖 researchers weigh these considerations when making an ultimate decision about what is, and is not, included.

In what follows, the who, what, where, when, why, and how of 澳彩开奖鈥檚 method is discussed in further detail.

Who did we include?

The Whose Heritage? database includes any person who served in the military or the government of the Confederate States of America. Examining the larger historical context and specific elements of the memorials guides decisions about Confederates whose legacies are not primarily defined by their service to the Confederate States of America. For example, was a Confederate general, but he later joined the Republican Party and criticized Robert E. Lee. Similarly, served as the 10th president of the United States from 1841 鈥 1845. When the South succeeded in 1861, he tried to facilitate a compromise but ultimately failed and joined the Confederacy, serving as a member of the Confederate House of Representatives. Memorials to Tyler are generally excluded from the database since they more often reference his legacy as president, not his legacy as a Confederate. However, memorials to Longstreet may or may not be included depending on whether the memorial celebrates his contributions to the Confederacy or to Reconstruction (some memorials intentionally do not feature him wearing his Confederate army uniform). Gathering information about who sponsored a memorial, why they sponsored it, when it was erected, and how it was interpreted is necessary for deciding whether it merits inclusion in the database.

Whose Heritage? also features memorials dedicated specifically to women of the Confederacy. Historians have noted the pivotal role white Southern women played in memorializing the Confederacy and propagating the Lost Cause ideology.[43] In addition to memorials that are dedicated to the women of the Confederacy generally, the database also includes memorials to , Jefferson Davis鈥檚 wife, and , his youngest daughter who became a symbol of the Lost Cause.[44]

By limiting the scope to memorials honoring Confederates, the database inevitably excludes racist or other problematic figures who did not serve the Confederacy. Memorials to , the South Carolina senator and defender of slavery, are excluded.[45] It also excludes figures who were adjacent to the Confederacy and offered significant material support but were not officially involved. People like 鈥 a Baptist minister who served as president of Richmond College, enslaved people, and invested in the Confederacy 鈥 though deeply problematic, are also excluded.[46]

As debates over memorials to Lewis and Clark, have demonstrated, legacies are complex.[47] Memorialization raises important questions about who gets remembered and how their contributions inform our collective past and our current historical moment. Although 澳彩开奖 calls for the removal of all symbols of hate and white supremacy, the goal of the Whose Heritage? database is to provide evidence in the service of interrogating and upending the deeply problematic values of the Confederacy. Although the integrity of the database requires making difficult decisions about who to include and exclude from the database, 澳彩开奖 encourages the replication of our methodology in order to create new projects tracking other figures who represent hate and are valorized in public space.

Workers drape statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee with a tarp
Workers drape a tarp over a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee in a public park in Charlottesville, Virginia. (Credit: Steve Helber/AP Images)

What are the criteria for inclusion?

There are two main criteria for inclusion in the database. First, the memorial must honor a Confederate or the Confederacy. Second, the memorial must be located in public space within the United States and its territories.

Public space includes property owned by the government as well as privately owned spaces that the general public is invited to enter. Therefore, memorials in cemeteries, battlefields, private schools, museums, parks, and even churches are included because these places all invite the public to view or venerate the Confederacy. Memorials that receive taxpayer subsidized financial support or official government endorsements (such as inclusion in the ) are also considered public.[48]

Although the majority of memorials in our database were dedicated after the Civil War, there is no criterion dealing with a memorial鈥檚 dedication date. This is because several memorials in the database were dedicated before the Civil War. They were included because the men they honor are known mostly today for their role in the Confederacy.

In some instances, memorials that fit the criteria above may be excluded from the database. For example, a plaque in a cemetery listing the names of individual Confederate soldiers who died would not be included if it was not promoting the 鈥淟ost Cause鈥 (but a 65-foot obelisk in a cemetery dedicated to Confederate soldiers is included). Ultimately, context鈥攏ot hard and fast rules鈥攇uides decisions about what is included and excluded from the database. This allows for a full consideration of the many factors at play, and for 澳彩开奖 to have confidence that the memorials in the database promoted hate and continue to convey this message in the present.

Finally, although reconciliation monuments dot the Southern landscape, 澳彩开奖 does not include these memorials in the database. Civil War expert that there are three visions of Civil War memory: reconciliation, white supremacy, and emancipation.[49] In Blight鈥檚 personification, reconciliation and white supremacy 鈥渓ocked鈥 arms, and reconciliation 鈥渙verwhelmed鈥 emancipation.[50] Though reconciliation memorials are deserving of special scrutiny, this database excludes reconciliation memorials. 澳彩开奖 encourages communities to study the history of their reconciliation monuments to understand the context in which they were constructed and to interrogate the deeply problematic legacy of reconciliation.

Where was the data sourced from?

In past editions of Whose Heritage?, 澳彩开奖 gathered data from the public alongside federal, state, and private sources including the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), the National Park Service, the National Register of Historic Places, state historical commissions鈥 resources, Art Inventories Catalog: Smithsonian American Art Museum, Waymarking, The Historical Marker Database, Documenting the American South, and online databases maintained by Confederate heritage groups. These websites formed the basis of the data used in the Third Edition.

The Dallas Confederate War Memorial statue in Dallas, Texas, is prepared for removal
The Dallas Confederate War Memorial statue at Pioneer Park in Dallas, Texas, stands over 65 feet tall and depicts a Confederate soldier standing atop an obelisk surrounded by Confederate President Jefferson Davis, Generals Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson and Albert Sidney Johnston. It was removed in June 2020. (Credit: Tony Gutierrez/AP Images)

This report builds upon and extends the data. Sequentum conducted data scrapes of the Waymarking and NCES websites. Researchers cross-listed the existing database with the 鈥渨eb scraped鈥 data to identify any new memorials that were not captured in previous data scrapes. When the origin of a school鈥檚 name was unknown, schools were contacted to verify whether it honored a Confederate.

Finally, 澳彩开奖 researchers set up Google Alerts (using the keyword Confederate) to monitor memorial removals, relocations, and renamings. In the spring of 2020, researchers reached out to state officials to verify the status of monuments in the database. In the summer of 2020, researchers again contacted officials at schools named after Confederates pending a name change.

When was data analysis conducted?

While the data and figures in this report were sourced on January 20, 2022, the information in our map and dataset is updated regularly. That means that numbers may fluctuate from day to day as new memorials are discovered and removed. To see the entire Whose Heritage? dataset, please visit .

Why was a new edition needed?

The third edition methodologically departs from the previous editions in three important ways, which allowed new insights and conclusions to emerge from the data.

First, this report explicitly draws on cultural history as a method of analysis. Emphasizing the context鈥攚ho sponsored a memorial, when it was erected, and how was it interpreted鈥攊nforms decisions about what to include or exclude from the database.

Rally outside school named after segregationist Robert Mills Lusher
A rally outside the Robert Mills Lusher Charter School in New Orleans, which is named after a Confederate and white supremacist. (Credit: Michael Democker/Getty Images)

Second, the criteria for inclusion in the database have expanded. Confederate memorials on battlefields and cemeteries are now included in the database. All Confederate memorials that welcome the public, even those that are privately owned, are now listed.

Finally, key terms used in the report and database have been defined and refined. Of note are different designations between memorials that were relocated, removed, pending, and renamed.

How are categories of analysis defined?

The Whose Heritage? data is publicly available on Google Sheets and is updated automatically every four hours. Each row in the master spreadsheet lists a different memorial and each column represents a different category of analysis. Definitions for the designations in each column can be found here.

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Man standing by street sign
Bishop O.C. Allen III stands in front of what used to be called Confederate Avenue in Atlanta. Until it was renamed United Avenue in 2018, Confederate Avenue served as a concrete reminder that Georgia once took up arms agains the United States. (Credit: David Goldman)

Main Conclusions

Most Confederate memorials are not monuments.

澳彩开奖 has identified 723 live monuments, which make up just over a third of all memorials in our database. But there are more roadways (741) honoring Confederates than there are monuments. Together with schools (201), counties and municipalities (104), parks (38), buildings (51), holidays (22), military bases (10), commemorative license plates (7), bodies of water (6), and bridges (6), these places do cultural work to reinforce the values of the Confederacy.

They are living memorials, which historian describes as 鈥渦seful projects such as community centers, libraries, forests, and even highways that were marked in some fashion鈥s memorials.鈥[51] Living memorials commemorate the past differently than monuments because they are used in the present, and therefore privilege everyday living over an official historical narrative. They deserve special attention because they force students at schools, soldiers on military bases, citizens of towns, and commuters traveling by roads to honor Confederate heroes in their everyday lives. Attending to the different forms Confederate memorials take provides a greater understanding of how the legacy of the Confederacy continues to inform racial inequality in the present.

Illustration of roadway and Confederate figures
Illustration: Zoe Van Dijk

Attending to the type of memorial is especially important given that the media frequently covers stories dealing with monuments. Images of crowds toppling Confederate monuments and construction crews removing statues in the dead of night dominate media coverage of Confederate memorials. These powerful photographs and televised coverage dramatically reflect ongoing debates about whether Confederate memorials are symbols of hate or history.[52] Sometimes stories about students attending schools named after Confederates and efforts to rename the ten military bases receive attention, but media coverage does not always reflect the diversity of Confederate memorials in this country. Though renaming and removing living Confederate memorials might not offer as dramatic a visual as toppling a monument, this action has an equally meaningful impact because it removes vestiges of the Confederacy from schools, roads, military bases, parks, and buildings鈥攖he places and spaces that are the fabric of our communities and our lives.

Confederate monuments are not limited to the South.

While the vast majority of Confederate memorials today are located in former Confederate States (1,910), Confederate memorials can be found in Union States and Washington, DC (44), border states (102), states that were not yet admitted to the Union (30), and even Puerto Rico (1).

Since the Civil War, more than 200 Confederate memorials have been dedicated outside of former Confederate states. Many of those have been removed, relocated, or renamed, but too many remain. Why are there so many Confederate memorials outside of the South?

Text: Number of Confederate Memorials in Particular Locations

Chapters of the United Daughters of the Confederacy existed outside of the South and promoted the Lost Cause across the United States. For example, during the 1930s, the who were decedents of Confederate veterans鈥攁 scholarship that was last offered in 2012 鈥 2013.[53] In 1963, the Boston Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy to Confederate prisoners of war held on Georges Island.[54] Though this memorial was removed in 2017, it illustrates how effective the organization was at promoting a false narrative about the Civil War that erased the role slavery played in the conflict. Moreover, white supremacy is not limited to the South. Because Confederate memorials are symbols of white supremacy, it is unsurprising that they would appear throughout the United States and its territories, as white supremacy is endemic to our society.

Confederate memorials have no place in public space. But it鈥檚 especially egregious that places that actively fought against the Confederacy and suffered causalities readily celebrate them. Therefore, 澳彩开奖 calls on communities across the United States鈥攚ithin and beyond the South鈥攖o reckon with their heritage and to remove not only symbols of white supremacy, but the systems that produced them.

The popularity of different kinds of Confederate memorials changes over time.

Most Confederate monuments were erected in the period following Reconstruction and during Jim Crow.[55] In 1908, 31 Confederate monuments were erected. The following year, 38 monuments were dedicated. In 1910, 46 new Confederate monuments were put up in public space. And by 1911, the year when the most Confederate monuments were erected in all United States history, communities and heritage groups erected 50 new Confederate monuments. Not coincidently, these monuments were being erected around the 50th anniversary of the Civil War when Americans were eager to embrace reconciliation鈥攁nd not emancipation.[56]

As the popularity of statuary memorials waned around World War I, so too did the production of Confederate monuments.[57] By World War II, Confederate sympathizers found new ways to commemorate the Confederacy.[58] Just as monuments were erected in response to Reconstruction, schools were largely named after Confederates in the period following the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision in , which ended racial segregation in schools. In 1965, the year after the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the same year as the Voting Rights Act was passed, nine schools were named after Confederates鈥攎ore dedications than any other year. Eight schools were dedicated in 1959, six schools were dedicated in 1958 and in 1962, and five schools were dedicated in 1961. Put another way, white communities signaled their opposition to the federal desegregation mandate by recalling Confederates who fought the United States to uphold white supremacy.

By carefully attending to what kinds of memorials were erected in different time periods, a clearer picture emerges of how memorial type conveys messages about race, white supremacy, and Civil War memory in different historical moments. Historian and General explained how during World War I the War Department鈥檚 guidelines about naming bases included a preference for Civil War generals who were local to the area and who would not 鈥渙ffend local sensibilities.鈥[59] He explains that training camps named for Lee, Beauregard, Benning, Bragg, and Gordon made sense to white Americans at the time who 鈥渇ound the Confederate states鈥 veterans more American than treasonous.鈥[60] Similarly, the Confederate battle flag as a symbol of white supremacy after 1948, when 鈥淒ixiecrats鈥 used it to oppose Civil Rights.[61] More research is needed to understand when and how the dedication of Confederate memorials including roadways, natural landmarks, holidays, counties, and towns enshrined white supremacy in public space.

Text: The Confederate battle flag took on a new meaning asa symbol of white supremacy after 1948, when "Dixiecrats" used it to oppose civil rights.

Specifying which memorials were erected and when also helps us to contextualize how the Civil War is commemorated today. Since 2000, 45 new Confederate monuments have been erected, and 24 of those were dedicated by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[62] Moreover, in 2019, 200 people attended a rededication for a Confederate monument in that was originally erected in 1909.[63] This ceremony reanimated the monument and reinforced the white supremacist values it represented. Scholar Erika Doss notes that memorials in America are 鈥渇lourishing,鈥 and coins the term memorial mania: 鈥渁n obsession with issues of memory and history and an urgent desire to express and claim those issues in visibly public contexts.鈥 According to Doss, 鈥淭oday鈥檚 growing numbers of memorials represent heightened anxieties about who and what should be remembered in America.鈥[64] The recent (re)dedications of Confederate monuments should be understood in this larger context, signaling how monuments powerfully reflect and shape anxieties over race in America. These new Confederate monuments reassert the Lost Cause narrative and cling to the racist belief of white Americans鈥 superiority.

Recent efforts to remove Confederate memorials offer inspiring insights that can assist social justice advocates working to create fairer, freer, and more just public spaces.

Since the Charleston church massacre in 2015, activists have successfully renamed, relocated, and removed 377 Confederate memorials from communities across the United States. This progress is inspiring and draws on the long history of Black activism contesting Confederate memorials. Our data suggests that despite the passage of draconian preservation laws, communities have found creative ways to remove symbols of hate from public space (but not always without retribution from state lawmakers and authorities). Moreover, the database indicates that there is more activism surrounding removing Confederate monuments than other kinds of monuments in the United States. According to Monument Lab鈥檚 , 99.4 percent of monuments 鈥渞emain in place.鈥 In contrast, a much higher percentage of the 885 monuments in our database have been removed, relocated, or renamed.[65]

One sobering conclusion about memorial removal is that communities are more likely to take action to remove a Confederate memorial in the wake of a tragedy or a hate crime. In 2015, sixteen memorials were relocated, removed, or renamed, compared with two memorials removed the year before. It took Charleston for Nikki Haley鈥攚ho served as governor of South Carolina when the shooting occurred鈥攖o realize that the Confederate flag at the State house grounds 鈥渟hould have never been there鈥 and that 鈥.鈥[66] The murder of nine Black worshipers should not have to be the impetus for the governor to realize that a Confederate symbol is causing hurt and pain.

Memorial with flowers and photos
After the 2017 Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, resulted in the death of Heather Heyer, 37 memorials were removed. (Credit: Evan Vuco/AP Images)

In 2017, after the Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia resulted in the death of anti-racist protestor Heather Heyer, 37 memorials were removed (compared with 17 memorials removed the year before). This was the moment Shah Rahman, , realized Confederate memorials should be removed from public space.[67] Seeing that the people protecting the statue of Lee in Charlottesville were 鈥渁 bunch of white supremacists,鈥 helped Rahman question the role of these memorials in our society. He described how, 鈥淚t never really occurred to me until that moment that these people we鈥檇 been taught to worship as heroes鈥攖hey were scumbags and traitors, fighting their own country.鈥 Rahman was not alone in taking action to create more fair and just public spaces in the wake of Charlottesville.

In 2020, the murder of George Floyd sparked the removal of 157 memorials, the most removals in any one year on record. In some instances, protestors dramatically felled the monuments. Other times, elected officials removed monuments, citing public safety concerns.

Text: Top three individuals commemorated

Some kinds of Confederate memorials are easier to remove than others, an insight that can impact social justice activists working to remove Confederate memorials. In 2021, at least 49 living memorials were removed, relocated, or renamed, but only 16 monuments came down. This trend bears out in 2016, 2018, and 2019, when communities removed, relocated, or renamed more living Confederate memorials than monuments. The years when George Floyd鈥檚 murder (2020) and the Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville (2017) occurred, communities took down more monuments than living Confederate memorials. Absent a similar social justice flashpoint, communities and activists seeking to remove symbols of hate from public space should consider starting with living Confederate memorials.

Schools are a good place to begin. In 2021, 33 schools were renamed or closed. The year before, 20 schools were renamed. This means that students鈥攁nd most especially students of color鈥攁re not forced to attend institutions named for people who fought to protect enslavement. Perhaps the public is more sympathetic to renaming schools than they are to taking down monuments. More research is needed to determine why communities have more successfully removed living Confederate memorials and to test this hypothesis about schools specifically.

The data also tells us that because removals are most likely to happen after a tragedy, better strategies for promoting sustained dialogue and activism are needed. The process of removing symbols of hate is continual and involves engaging communities in conversations about race and memory. In fact, at least one historian has argued that discussion is critical for removals. Denise Meringolo has said that after a monument has been removed, 鈥[68] 澳彩开奖 is committed to supporting communities in their efforts to grapple with the legacy of the Civil War by removing symbols of white supremacy and by promoting ongoing, open, and honest communication about race in this country.

The top three individuals commemorated are Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, and Stonewall Jackson.

Most Confederate memorials in the United States today don鈥檛 commemorate a specific individual (722). But of the ones that do, Robert E. Lee (235) is most frequently honored, followed by Jefferson Davis (144), and Thomas Jonathan 鈥淪tonewall鈥 Jackson (121).

was a famed Confederate general who enslaved people and wrote about the superiority of the white race.[69] There is no truth to the pernicious myth that he was a 鈥渒indly鈥 enslaver. He separated enslaved families, and Wesley Norris, a man that Lee enslaved, described torture at Lee鈥檚 direction. 鈥淣ot satisfied with simply lacerating our naked flesh,鈥 Norris said, 鈥淕en. Lee then ordered the overseer to thoroughly wash our backs with brine, which was done.鈥 Despite this brutality, there are more memorials to Robert E. Lee in the United States than there are monuments to either Benjamin Franklin or John F. Kennedy.

Crane operators lift statue of Stonewall Jackson
On July 1, 2020, in Richmond, Virginia, workers removed the statue of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson from its pedestal in Monument Park. (Credit: Steve Helber/AP Images)

Jefferson Davis, the President of the Confederacy, was similarly cruel. He people and , 鈥渁 form of civil government instituted for a class of people not fit to govern themselves鈥e recognize the fact of the inferiority stamped upon that race of men by the Creator, and from the cradle to grave, our Government, as a civil institution, marks that inferiority.鈥[70] In addition to his views on slavery, he led a government that committed treason against the United States. And he was extremely unpopular .[71]

Finally, Thomas Jonathan 鈥淪tonewall鈥 Jackson, another General in the Confederate States Army, and on slavery.[72] According to the , only Robert E. Lee is a more celebrated Confederate general.[73] Speeches at Virginia Military Institute for the dedication ceremonies of the Jackson-Hope Medals (1877), the Stonewall Jackson Memorial Building (1897), and the Stonewall Jackson Statue (1912) provide insight into why Jackson retains such a stronghold on the popular imagination. Speakers lauded his faith and praised his skill as a general, often elevating him and deifying the role he played in the war.[74] However, his commemoration鈥攍ike all Confederates鈥攊s premised on the erasure of the role he played in defending the institution of slavery and his acts of treason against the United States.听

This is the history that is celebrated by the memorials that honor these men. That two of these three men are remembered primarily for their military service is no accident. Indeed, most of the Confederate figures honored by memorials served the Confederate armed services, not the government. Eighty percent of the 20 most commemorated Confederate figures were in the military. After Jefferson Davis, the second most frequently commemorated Confederate civilian is , the Secretary of War.[75]

.[76] Confederate memorials reflect this, intentionally telling a version of history that erases what these men fought to protect: slavery. Who Confederate memorials remember reinforces the way war and violence work simultaneously to facilitate white supremacy and dominate our collective memory.

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Action Items

If you鈥檝e been inspired by the data and stories in the report, 澳彩开奖 invites you to take action and challenge the Lost Cause ideology. Within and beyond the South, there are opportunities to make a lasting impact through education and听engagement with elected officials and community leaders.听Here are three ways to get started:

鈥 Use the Whose Heritage?map and to research whether there鈥檚 a Confederate memorial in your community.听Contact us听if there is a Confederate memorial that鈥檚 missing from our data.

鈥 Support or promote legislation, policies, and community action that encourages the removal of symbols of hate from public space.

鈥 Teach the history of the Civil War honestly and accurately. Learning for Justice鈥檚听Teaching Hard History听framework provides resources for educators looking to inform students about the legacy of slavery in the United States.听

For more information,听and for tools to build a campaign against these offensive Confederate symbols,听check out the听Whose Heritage?听Community Action Guide.听

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Hands work on flag
Professor Sonya Clark's visual narratives in Unraveling offer an alternative way of challenging the "Lost Cause" ideology. (Credit: Taylor Dabney)

Conclusion

A New Day Dawns poem

On Oct. 15, 2021, the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center (JSAAHC) in Charlottesville, Virginia wrote to the City Council asking them for possession of the Robert E. Lee statue 鈥 made famous during the city鈥檚 deadly Unite the Right Rally in 2017鈥攆or the purpose of melting down the metal and 鈥.鈥[77] By building the community鈥檚 input into the transformation process and prioritizing the descendants of enslaved people, JSAAHC ensured democratic participation and community healing. Their appeal was persuasive and , the city council voted to donate the statue to the history center.[78]

According to poet and Mellon Foundation President Elizabeth Alexander, 鈥.鈥[79] Despite the best efforts of those who sought to commemorate the Confederacy, their memorials, like all memorials, are impermanent. Confederate memorials should never have been built, and we must follow the lead of communities and groups like the JSAAHC and actively remake our history and our public space. Transforming our commemorative and political landscapes are not mutually exclusive goals; the work of Whose Heritage? will continue well beyond the removal of the last remaining Confederate memorial and will end only when our institutions are free of racial inequality.听 We invite you to join us as we embark on this project.

Further Reading: For more information, see Educational Materials

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Endnotes

[1]听听听听听听听听听听 The figures in this report reflect 澳彩开奖 data at the time of publication on January 20, 2022. For the most recent numbers, please .

[2]听听听听听听听听听听 Historian Christopher A. Graham describes the Lost Cause as 鈥渁 historical ideology and a social movement created by ex-Confederates that characterized the Confederate experience and defined its value for new generations.鈥 For more, see , accessed Dec. 23, 2021. See also , accessed January 21, 2022.

[3]听听听听听听听听听 鈥淲hose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy,鈥 澳彩开奖, accessed January 21, 2022; and 鈥淲hose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy,鈥 澳彩开奖, Febraury 1, 2019.

[4]听听听听听听听听听 鈥湴牟士 Reports Over 160 Confederate Symbols Removed in 2020,鈥 February 23, 2021.

[5]听听听听听听听听听听 Scholar Karen Cox has written expertly on both why Confederate memorials were dedicated and how Black activists have long challenged these symbols of hate. She argues, 鈥渢he Daughters, as UDC members were known, raised the stakes of the Lost Cause by making it a movement about vindication, as well as memorialization. They erected monuments, monitored history for 鈥榯ruthfulness,鈥 and sought to educate coming generations of white southerners about an idyllic Old South and a just cause鈥攕tates鈥 rights. They did so not simply to pay homage to the Confederate dead. Rather, UDC members aspired to transform military defeat into a political and cultural victory, where states鈥 rights and white supremacy remained intact.鈥 See Karen L. Cox, Dixie鈥檚 Daughters: The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Preservation of Confederate Culture. 2nd ed. (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2019). For more on the long history of Black activism and protest, see Karen L. Cox, No Common Ground: Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 2021).

[6]听听听听听听听听听 According to Cox, 鈥淎frican Americans have participated in a tradition of protest against Confederate monuments and the Lost Cause since the late nineteenth century.鈥 For more, see Cox, No Common Ground, 25.

[7]听听听听听听听听 For more on how the Confederate battle flag was used, see Cox, No Common Ground, 121-122. See also .

[8]听听听听听听听听 According to the American Historical Association, 鈥淢emorials to the Confederacy were intended, in part, to obscure the terrorism required to overthrow Reconstruction, and to intimidate African Americans politically and isolate them from the mainstream of public life. A reprise of commemoration during the mid-20th century coincided with the Civil Rights Movement and included a wave of renaming and the popularization of the Confederate flag as a political symbol.鈥 See , accessed Dec. 23, 2021.

[9]听听听听听听听听听听 Lee Barrow. 鈥淐alled 'Slap in The Face': Baseball Fans Hit 'Confederate' Name,鈥 Afro-American (1893-1988), Feb. 6, 1954.

[10]听听听听听听听听听听 .

[11]听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[12]听听听听听听听听听 After Virginia decided against using the name 鈥淐onfederates,鈥 Columbus, Georgia鈥檚 baseball team in the AA Southern League adopted the name the 鈥淐onfederate Yankees鈥 from 1964 to 1966. Their uniforms featured a Confederate flag patch, and they were associated with the New York Yankees. See ; and

[13]听听听听听听听听听听 7. Archived.

[14]听听听听听听听听听 .

[15]听听听听听听听听 On the distinction between memorials and monuments, see Erika Doss, Memorial Mania: Public Feeling in America (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2010), 37-48.

[16]听听听听听听听听 鈥淲hose Heritage Educational Materials,鈥 澳彩开奖, accessed January 24, 2022.

[17]听听听听听听听听听 For more on how Black activists have challenged Confederate monuments, see Karen L. Cox, No Common Ground.

[18]听听听听听听听听听听 . Archived.

[19]听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[20]听听听听听听听听 See, for example, 鈥淢onuments Or Justice--Which?,鈥 The Chicago Defender (Big Weekend Edition) (1905-1966), May 30, 1914; 鈥淏uilding Monuments,鈥 The Chicago Defender (Big Weekend Edition) (1905-1966), June 12, 1915; Ralph Matthews, 鈥淲atching The Big Parade: The Pappy Monument,鈥 Afro-American (1893-1988), Sept. 26, 1931; 鈥淐onfederates To Dedicate 鈥楿ncle Tom鈥 Monument,鈥 Afro-American (1893-1988), October 10, 1931. For a scholarly analysis of the faithful slave, see Micki McElya, Clinging to Mammy: The Faithful Slave in Twentieth-Century America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2007). For more on how African Americans used the Black press to protest Confederate memorials, see Cox, No Common Ground, 63-68.

[21]听听听听听听听听 . See also .

[22]听听听听听听听听 Micki McElya,鈥淐ommemorating the Color Line: The National Mammy Monument Controversy of the 1920s,鈥 in Monuments to the Lost Cause: Women, Art, and the Landscapes of Southern Memory, eds. Cynthia Mills and Pamela H. Simpson, 2nd ed. (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2019), 203-218.

[23]听听听听听听听听 Black cadets at West Point challenged President Nixon鈥檚 suggestion that the school build a Confederate monument, another example of Black activism preventing memorials from being built. For more, see Ty Seidule, Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerner鈥檚 Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause (New York: St. Martin鈥檚 Press, 2020); 鈥斺斺, 鈥淏lack Power Cadets: How African American Students Defeated President Nixon鈥檚 Confederate Monument and Changed West Point, 1971 鈥 1976,鈥 Hudson River Valley Review 36, no. 1 (Autumn 2019): 55-82.

[24]听听听听听听听听 . For more on the dedication of the Silent Sam statue, see Cox, No Common Ground, 104-106.

[25]听听听听听听听 Kimberly Probolus, 鈥淲hy Does the U.S. Military Still Glorify the Confederacy? A Conversation With Professor Matthew Delmont,鈥 澳彩开奖.

[26]听听听听听听 Mike Bowler, 鈥淪chools Open in Upson: All Not Well in Thomaston,鈥 Atlanta Constitution, Aug. 20, 1970.

[27]听听听听听听听听 Kyshia Henderson, Samuel Powers, Michele Claibourn, Jazmin L. Brown-Iannuzzi, and Sophie Trawalter, 鈥淐onfederate Monuments and the History of Lynching in the American South: An Empirical Examination,鈥 .

[28]听听听听听听听听 ; and Holmes v. Hunt summary, 澳彩开奖, accessed January 24, 2022.

[29]听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022; and .

[30]听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[31]听听听听听听 .

[32]听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[33]听听听听听听听 , accessed January 25, 2022.

[34]听听听听听听 .

[35]听听听听听听 .

[36]听听听听听 .

[37]听听听听听听 .

[38]听听听听听听听听听听 鈥湴牟士 Launches 鈥楨rasing Hate鈥 Campaign,鈥 澳彩开奖, August 2, 2015.

[39]听听听听听听听听听听 Historians generally eschew an exact definition of cultural history, instead preferring to describe its characteristics. For an in-depth analysis, see Geoff Eley, A Crooked Line: From Cultural History to the History of Society (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2005); and Lawrence B. Glickman, 鈥淭he 鈥楥ultural鈥 Turn,鈥 in American History Now eds. Eric Foner and Lisa McGirr. (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2011).

[40]听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[41]听听听听听听听听听 See, for example, Karen L. Cox, Dixie鈥檚 Daughters; Karen Cox, No Common Ground; Kevin M. Kruse, White Flight: Atlanta and the Making of Modern Conservatism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005); Matthew D. Lassiter and Andrew B. Lewis, eds., The Moderates鈥 Dilemma: Massive Resistance to School Desegregation in Virginia (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1998); and Andrew Shanken, 鈥淧lanning Memory: Living Memorials in the United States During World War II,鈥 The Art Bulletin 84, no. 1 (March 2002): 130-147.

[42]听听听听听听听听听听 .

[43]听听听听听听听听听 Karen L. Cox, Dixie鈥檚 Daughters.

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[49]听听听听听听听听 .

[50]听听听听听听听听 David W. Blight, Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001), 2.

[51]听听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[52]听听听听听听听听听听 It is not surprising that the media would be more inclined to report on stories about monuments. In fact, during the Civil Rights movement, the media was far more likely to cover dramatic stories featuring racial conflict and violence. The bureaucratic, everyday actions and organizing that facilitates change does not always make for a great media story. Similarly, conflicts over Confederate monuments provide compelling visualizations to illustrate debates over history and heritage. For more on the relationship between the media and the Civil Rights movement, see especially Aniko Bodroghkozy, Equal Time: Television and the Civil Rights Movement (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2012); and Matthew F. Delmont, Why Busing Failed: Race, Media, and the National Resistance to School Desegregation (Oakland: University of California Press, 2016).

[53]听听听听听听听听听 .

[54]听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[55]听听听听听听听听听听 听 The erection of Confederate monuments from the 1870s to the 1920s is part of a larger trend in Europe and America that scholar Erika Doss describes as 鈥渟tatue mania.鈥 Doss explains, 鈥淎fter the divisiveness of the Civil War, countless American cities and towns vied for statues (and other symbolic markers) that helped reimagine what Benedict Anderson terms the 鈥榓ffective bonds of nationalism.鈥 Statues not only embellished the postbellum public landscape but encouraged passionate and consensual understandings of nationhood.鈥 See Doss, Memorial Mania, 20.

[56]听听听听听听听听听 As David Blight notes of the 50th anniversary, 鈥淯nderstandably, the dominant mode of memory was reconciliation.鈥 See Blight, Race and Reunion, 381.

[57]听听听听听听听听 Confederate memorials are both reflective of and have contributed to statue mania鈥檚 decline. As Doss notes, 鈥淏y the 1920s, statue mania was seen as a crisis of emotional excess, a troubling public spectacle of intemperate affect.鈥 See Doss, Memorial Mania, 30.

[58]听听听听听听听听 Andrew M. Shanken explains why Civil War memorials fell out of favor during World War II. He writes, 鈥淢emorials have a history of disappearing during moments of intensive political turmoil and war because of their power to incite emotion and political response. During World War II, however, critics dismissed them not for their power but ostensibly for their lack of power鈥.Writers unmercifully poked fun at the mass-produced Civil War statues on their nearly identical plinths.鈥 See Shanken, 鈥淧lanning Memory.鈥

[59]听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 24, 2022.

[60]听听听听听听听听听听 Seidule, Robert E. Lee and Me, 155.

[61]听听听听听听听听听 For more on how the Confederate battle flag was used, see Cox, No Common Ground, 121-122. See also .

[62]听听听听听听听听 Karen Cox notes, "The group responsible for this latest spate has been the Sons of Confederate Veterans." Cox, No Common Ground, 24.

[63]听听听听听听听听 .

[64]听听听听听听听听 Doss, Memorial Mania, 2.

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[74]听听听听听听 鈥淎ddress of Gov. James L. Kemper,鈥 July 3, 1877, Speeches and Addresses, Published, Chronological File., 1870-1879. Published Speeches and Addresses Delivered at the Virginia Military Institute. RG 06 Publications 鈥 Speeches. Virginia Military Institute Archives; 鈥淎ddress by Dr. Hunter McGuire,鈥 June 23, 1897, Speeches and Addresses, Published, Chronological File., 1890-1899. Published Speeches and Addresses Delivered at the Virginia Military Institute. RG 06 Publications 鈥 Speeches. Virginia Military Institute Archives; 鈥 The Religious Character鈥 by James Power Smith, June 23, 1897, Speeches and Addresses, Published, Chronological File., 1890-1899. Published Speeches and Addresses Delivered at the Virginia Military Institute. RG 06 Publications 鈥 Speeches. Virginia Military Institute Archives; 鈥淢emorial Exercises at the Unveiling,鈥 June 19, 1912, Speeches and Addresses, Published, Chronological File., 1900-1984. Published Speeches and Addresses Delivered at the Virginia Military Institute. RG 06 Publications 鈥 Speeches. Virginia Military Institute Archives.

[75]听听听听听听听 , accessed January 25, 2022.

[76]听听听听听听 , accessed January 25, 2022.

[77]听听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 25, 2022, Archived.

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[79]听听听听听听听听听 , accessed January 25, 2022.

[80] 听听听听听听听听听Finney, Nikky. 鈥淎 New Day Dawns.鈥 In Love Child鈥檚 Hotbed of Occasional Poetry: Poems and Artifacts. Evanston: TriQuarterly Books/ Northwestern University Press, 2020. pp.160-161.

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