Confederate flag enthusiast loses attempt to stop the return of beachfront property to the black family from which it was wrongly taken – Boing Boing

A gentleman better known for creating controversy by flying the Confederate battle flag over his home, Joseph Ryan, once again demonstrated who he is by filing suit against the County of Los Angeles in an attempt to stop the return of beachfront real estate stripped from a black family, the Bruces, almost a century ago.

The County continues forward with restoring the land to its rightful owners.

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Joseph Ryan, an attorney from Palos Verdes Estates, filed a complaint with the court in November seeking an injunction against the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. Ryan argued the land transfer does not serve a public purpose and the state law recently enacted to enable it, S.B. 796, is therefore unconstitutional under California law. The Bruce family joined the County in defending against the lawsuit.

Judge Mitchell Beckloff, in a ruling issued April 14, rejected Ryan's argument, paving the way for the land transfer. The Bruce's are expected to take ownership of the land within months. The judge wrote that redressing a past governent wrong in order to remedy racial discrimination serves a public purpose.

Ryan did not respond to a request for comment. He drew attention four years ago for his practice of raising Confederate battle flags over his PVE home, which upset some neighbors. He is a Civil War buff who publishes a blog called "Joe Ryan's American Civil War." In a 2018 Daily Breeze article about his Confederate flags, Ryan noted that he also flies Union flags and said that he was simply trying to bring attention to the racial underpinnings of American history.

"I don't really give a damn about the politics of liberal idiots who want to look at that flag and say, 'Oh that's racist,'" Ryan told the Daily Breeze. "The last person you can call a racist is me."

Apparently, Mr. Ryan and I disagree on what a racist is.

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Confederate flag enthusiast loses attempt to stop the return of beachfront property to the black family from which it was wrongly taken - Boing Boing

Settlement reached after Jefferson City sued for removing Confederate-related stones – KOMU 8

JEFFERSON CITY - The city of Jefferson and a former councilwoman who sued the cityin late March have reached a settlement regarding the removal of Confederate-related paving stones on city property.

Bradbury Law Firm, who represented Edith Vogel in the lawsuit, announced that a settlement between Vogel and the city is awaiting a signature from a judge.

In the settlement, the city has agreed to reinstall the pavers within 15 days and pay Vogels attorneys fees.

Vogelsued Jefferson Cityand Mayor Carrie Terginin late March, alleging the city violated her free speech rights when two paving stones with messages about a Confederate general were removed from city property.

Vogel paid to have the two engraved paving stones installed at a new park on a city greenway known as Adrians Island as part of a fundraising campaign.

The pavers read: Union Camp Lillie notes: deciding against attack the confederate army under Gen. Sterling Price turned from Jefferson City Oct. 7, 1864.

The pavers were similar to theanother paving stone the city council voted to remove from a roadway in October 2021.

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Vogel, in a press release sent from her lawyers, said that her victory was a win for history.

I feel vindicated, Vogel said. I didnt think what they mayor did was right."

Vogel's attorneys also announced that she will donate $2,000 to the Parks Foundation to make up for the amount the city had refunded to her.

Though the settlement doesn't require it, Vogel said "it's just the right thing to do."

KOMU 8 has reached to Mayor Tergin for a statement regarding the settlement.

This story will be updated.

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Settlement reached after Jefferson City sued for removing Confederate-related stones - KOMU 8

The Wolf of Crypto and the Confederate Statue Remover: The Week in Narrated Articles – The New York Times

This weekend, listen to a collection of narrated articles from around The New York Times, read aloud by the reporters who wrote them.

Jordan Belfort, 59, is best known for The Wolf of Wall Street, a tell-all memoir about his debauched 1990s career in high finance, which the director Martin Scorsese adapted into a 2013 movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio as the hard-partying protagonist. These days, the real-life Mr. Belfort is a consultant and sales coach, charging tens of thousands of dollars for private sessions.

In 2018, he filmed a YouTube video about the dangers of Bitcoin, which he called frickin insanity and mass delusion. Over the years, he said, he gradually changed his mind, as he learned more about cryptocurrencies and prices skyrocketed.

Now, Mr. Belfort is an investor in a handful of start-ups, including a new NFT platform and an animal-themed crypto project that he said was trying to take the dog-and-pet ecosystem and put it onto the blockchain.

Statue removal has become a lucrative line of work amid the ongoing national reckoning over traumas past and present. But in Richmond, Va., where a 21-foot figure of Robert E. Lee towered over the city for more than a century, officials say no amount of government pleading produced a volunteer interested in dismantling the citys many Confederate monuments during the tense and sometimes violent days of summer 2020.

Except Devon Henry. He and his general contracting company, Team Henry Enterprises, have hauled away 15 pieces of Confederate statuary in Richmond and a total of 23 monuments across the Southeast in less than two years.

But the work has come with considerable personal risk: Mr. Henry, 45, has been repeatedly threatened, carries a firearm and often wears a bulletproof vest on job sites.

You start thinking, Damn, was it worth it? Mr. Henry said. But then there are moments; my daughter, in her interview for college, said I was her hero.

Written and narrated by Emily Anthes

Since Russian forces invaded Ukraine in February, the worlds attention has been focused on the nations heavily shelled cities. But Ukraine, in an ecological transition zone, is also home to vibrant wetlands and forests and a large part of virgin steppe. Russian troops have already entered or conducted military operations in more than one-third of the nations protected natural areas, Oleksandr Krasnolutskyi, a deputy minister of environmental protection and natural resources in Ukraine, said: Their ecosystems and species have become vulnerable.

Reports from the ground, and research on previous armed conflicts, suggest that the ecological impact of the conflict could be profound. Wars destroy habitats, kill wildlife, generate pollution and remake ecosystems entirely, with consequences that ripple through the decades.

Written and narrated by Michael Corkery

Mary Gundel loved her job managing the Dollar General store in Tampa, Fla. It was fast-paced, unpredictable and even exciting.

But the job had its challenges: Delivery trucks that would show up unannounced, leaving boxes piled up in the aisles because there werent enough workers to unpack them. Days spent running the store for long stretches by herself because the company allotted only so many hours for other employees to work. Cranky customers complaining about out of stock items.

So one morning, in between running the register and putting tags on clothing, Ms. Gundel, 33, propped up her iPhone and hit record. The result was a six-part critique, Retail Store Manager Life, in which Ms. Gundel laid bare the working conditions inside the fast-growing retail chain.

Her videos, which she posted on TikTok, went viral.

Written and narrated by Thomas Fuller

Their bodies were found on public benches, lying next to bike paths, crumpled under freeway overpasses and stranded on the sun-drenched beach. Across Los Angeles County last year, unsheltered people died in record numbers, an average of five homeless deaths a day, most in plain view of the world around them.

Two hundred eighty-seven homeless people took their last breath on the sidewalk, 24 died in alleys and 72 were found on the pavement, according to data from the county coroner. They were a small fraction of the thousands of homeless people across the country who die each year.

Its like a wartime death toll in places where there is no war, said Maria Raven, an emergency room doctor in San Francisco who co-wrote a study about homeless deaths.

More than ever it has become deadly to be homeless in America.

The Timess narrated articles are made by Tally Abecassis, Parin Behrooz, Anna Diamond, Sarah Diamond, Jack DIsidoro, Aaron Esposito, Dan Farrell, Elena Hecht, Adrienne Hurst, Elisheba Ittoop, Emma Kehlbeck, Marion Lozano, Tanya Prez, Krish Seenivasan, Margaret H. Willison, Kate Winslett, John Woo and Tiana Young. Special thanks to Sam Dolnick, Ryan Wegner, Julia Simon and Desiree Ibekwe.

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The Wolf of Crypto and the Confederate Statue Remover: The Week in Narrated Articles - The New York Times

Mississippi might have to rethink Confederate statues in US Capitol – Stars and Stripes

Rep. Bennie Thompson, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, departs the Capitol after Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., appointed him to lead the new select committee to investigate the violent Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol, in Washington, Thursday, July 1, 2021. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

JACKSON, Miss. Mississippians find unity in bragging about the state's influence on American culture. The state prides itself on being birthplace of the blues and home of towering literary figures.

Yet, even as the nation reconsiders the public display of Confederate monuments amid a reckoning over issues of racial injustice, Mississippi a state with a 38% Black population still represents itself inside the U.S. Capitol with still-life images of Confederates.

Each state can have two figures in the Capitol's Statuary Hall collection, and Mississippi donated bronze statues of Jefferson Davis and James Zachariah George in 1931.

Davis served in the U.S. House and Senate from Mississippi before becoming president of the Confederacy. George was a member of Mississippi's Secession Convention in 1861, and he signed the secession ordinance that included these words: "Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery the greatest material interest of the world."

On June 29, the Democratic-led U.S. House voted 285-120 in favor of a legislation "to remove all statues of individuals who voluntarily served the Confederate States of America from display in the United States Capitol." The proposal awaits a vote in the Senate.

Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson is the only Black member of Mississippi's four-person House delegation, and he was the only of the four to vote in favor of mandating removal of Confederate statues.

Statues "of those who served in the Confederacy or supported slavery or segregation should not have a place of honor in the U.S. Capitol that's why I voted to #RemoveHate today," Thompson wrote that day on Twitter.

Republican Reps. Trent Kelly and Steven Palazzo voted against the legislation. Republican Rep. Michael Guest missed the vote because a family member had died and he was delayed returning to Washington. However, Kelly said in a statement that he had voted against a similar bill last year.

"I would be opposed to the federal government ordering or dictating Mississippi to remove those statues," Guest said in the statement.

Even among the states that tried to secede from the Union, Mississippi is the only with two Confederate figures in the Statuary Hall collection.

One of Alabama's statues is of a Confederate cavalry leader, "Fighting Joe" Wheeler. The other is Helen Keller, and the base of the statue includes an inscription in Braille.

One of Louisiana's statues is of Edward Douglass White, who was a U.S. Supreme Court justice from 1894 until his death in 1921, spending his final 11 years as chief justice. The other is of former Gov. Huey P. Long.

Virginia currently has one figure in Statuary Hall, and it is George Washington. In December, the state removed its statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee that had stood in the nation's Capitol for 111 years.

"The Confederacy is a symbol of Virginia's racist and divisive history, and it is past time we tell our story with images of perseverance, diversity, and inclusion," Virginia's Democratic governor, Ralph Northam, said in a statement.

Guest pointed out in his statement that the legislature of each state already has the power to decide which statues to send to the Capitol.

Mississippi legislators have shown no appetite for this debate, but they took a landmark vote in June 2020 to retire the last state flag that included the Confederate battle emblem. They don't need to wait for a directive from Congress to start discussing other historical figures who could become Mississippi's still-life representatives.

They could consider civil rights leaders Medgar Evers or Fannie Lou Hamer.

The arts world offers several prominent Mississippians: B.B. King, Elvis Presley, Margaret Walker Alexander, Eudora Welty, Richard Wright and William Faulkner.

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Mississippi might have to rethink Confederate statues in US Capitol - Stars and Stripes

Charlottesville Removes Confederate Statues That Sparked A Deadly Rally – NPR

Workers remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va. Win McNamee/Getty Images hide caption

Workers remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va.

The city of Charlottesville, Va., removed a statue of Confederate Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson on Saturday, toppling symbols that were at the center of the deadly Unite the Right rally in 2017.

The statues will remain on city property until the city council decides what to do with them. Ten groups have expressed interest in the statues, according to a statement from the city.

"Taking down this statue is one small step closer to the goal of helping Charlottesville, Va., and America, grapple with the sin of being willing to destroy Black people for economic gain," Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker said as the crane neared the Lee monument, the Associated Press reported.

Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker (left) speaks to reporters before workers remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday. Win McNamee/Getty Images hide caption

Charlottesville Mayor Nikuyah Walker (left) speaks to reporters before workers remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee from Market Street Park on Saturday.

The removals were set in motion by a 2016 petition started by a local high school student. The city council voted to take the statues down early the next year, but that action was delayed by a legal challenge that was ultimately rejected by the Virginia Supreme Court this April.

The statues of Lee and Jackson and threats to remove them served as a rallying cry for the far right in the summer of 2017. The tension spilled into violence in the Aug. 12, 2017, Unite the Right Rally as neo-Nazis clashed with counter protestors. One woman, Heather Heyer, was killed when a man drove into a crowd of pedestrians. Dozens of others were injured in that attack and other violence.

Another, taller statue of Lee remains standing in Richmond, Virginia's capital., awaiting a final judgment in a separate legal challenge. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam has ordered the state-owned statue removed as soon as the case is resolved. Four other Confederate statues that lined the city's iconic Monument Avenue were taken down last summer amid racial justice protests.

Charlottesville's statues of Lee and Jackson were erected in the early 1920s with large ceremonies that included Confederate veteran reunions, parades and balls. At one event during the 1921 unveiling of the Jackson statue, children formed a living Confederate flag on the lawn of a school down the road from Vinegar Hill, a prominent Black neighborhood. The Jackson statue was placed on land that had once been another prosperous Black neighborhood.

Workers remove the monument of Robert E. Lee on Saturday, in Charlottesville. John C. Clark/AP hide caption

Workers remove the monument of Robert E. Lee on Saturday, in Charlottesville.

Their erection coincided with a push across the South to valorize the Confederacy and suppress Black communities, according to Sterling Howell, programs coordinator with the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society.

"This was at the height of Jim Crow segregation, at the height of lynchings in American history," he said. "There was a clear statement that they weren't welcome."

Workers remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson in Charlottesville on Saturday. Win McNamee/Getty Images hide caption

Workers remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson in Charlottesville on Saturday.

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Charlottesville Removes Confederate Statues That Sparked A Deadly Rally - NPR

More heat in the West, Wimbledon finals, Confederate statues’ removal: 5 things weekend – USA TODAY

More brutal temperatures hit the West

Another blistering heat wave is in the forecast for the western United States this weekend. All-time record high temperatures could be registered in cities such as Las Vegas and Sacramento, while notorious hotspot Death Valley should see highs approaching 130 degrees just a few degrees short of Earth's hottest temperature ever measured. The heat comes as the country reels from its hottest June on record.

Heat wave brings record highs to Pacific Northwest, residents react

Cities like Seattle and Portland are seeing record-setting temperatures.

Associated Press, USA TODAY

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Wimbledon will hold its mens and womens singles finalsthis weekend. On Saturday,current No. 1 Ash Barty of Australia will take on former No. 1 Karolina Pliskovaof the Czech Republic in the womens final (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) as each seeks herfirst Wimbledon title.The men will take the court Sunday (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) with history on the line:Facing No. 7 seed Matteo Berrettini of Italy, the world'sNo. 1 Novak Djokovic seeks his sixth Wimbledon crown, his third major of 2021, and his 20th career Grand Slam singles title, which would tie longtime rivals Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal for the most in men's tennis.

Billionaire Richard Branson is headed to space Sunday in his own rocket. He is due to take off from New Mexico, launching with two pilots and three other employees aboard a rocket carried aloft by a double-fuselage aircraft. It will come only nine days before Amazon's Jeff Bezos plans to ride in his own Blue Origin spacecraft. While Branson's flight will be longer, Bezos' will be higher. Branson considers itvery important to try it out before allowing space tourists on board.

A Confederate monument thatwas the center of a violent 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, leaving one person dead, is expected to come down Saturday. The city said the bronze statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and one of Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson will be removed and stored until the city council decides where to move them. Council members voted to take down the Lee statue in 2017. Several organizations sued in opposition, but the Virginia Supreme Court ruled forthe cityin April.

After a pair of extra time wins in the semifinals, England and Italy take the field Sunday for the final of the UEFA European Championship. Italy reached the final by defeating Spain in a penalty shootout in the semifinal, and England held off Denmark in extra time. The English are aiming for their first major international tournament since the 1966 World Cup, while Italy is looking to claim silverware for the first time since winning the 2006 World Cup. The matchup also presents a compelling matchup, with England allowing the least amount of goalsat Euro 2020 and Italy being the second-highest scoring team at the tournament.

Greenpeace parachuting protestor injures Euro 2020 fans in Munich

Several spectators were injured after a protestor parachuted into the stadium.

API Global

The Associated Press contributed.

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More heat in the West, Wimbledon finals, Confederate statues' removal: 5 things weekend - USA TODAY

‘Drug deal gone bad’ leads to shooting on Confederate Drive – Port City Daily

WILMINGTON The police secured warrants for the arrest of 20-year-old Lorenzo Angelo Patrick as part of a drug deal gone bad, according to the Wilmington Police Department.

Tavon White and his girlfriend met up with Patrick in a parking lot on Confederate Drive, police reported. Patrick drew a gun and demanded the couple to give up everything. It led to a dispute between White and Patrick, who fought over the weapon when it went off and struck White in the torso. The 25-year-old victim went to NHRMC.

On July 9, the police showed up to the hospital after being called about a gunshot victim at the hospital. White remains in ICU in stable condition.

The police secured warrants for robbery with a dangerous weapon, assault with a deadly weapon, and intent to kill inflicting serious injury.

Anyone with information should call the Wilmington PD or anonymously through 411. WPD stated the community is not in immediate danger from this event.

Tips or comments? Email info@localdailymedia.com

Subscribenowand then sign up for our newsletter,Wilmington Wire, to get the headlines delivered to your inbox every morning.

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'Drug deal gone bad' leads to shooting on Confederate Drive - Port City Daily

Neo-Confederates worked with other far-right groups in failed efforts to preserve monuments – The Guardian

North Carolina members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) collaborated with other neo-Confederate and far-right groups in failed efforts to preserve Confederate monuments in the state, according to emails, documents and videos reviewed by the Guardian.

Members of the coalition of groups protesting the removal of Confederate monuments include a man with simultaneous membership in SCV and League of the South (LOS), and at least one person who attended the rally at the Capitol in Washington DC on 6 January, which turned into an attack on the building.

The SCV is a neo-Confederate group dedicated to preserving what it sees as southern heritage, in particular Confederate statues and war memorials, in spite of the rise of Black Lives Matter antiracism protests, which frequently target such statues as memorials to racism and slavery.

James Smithson, a member both of SCV and the SCVs Mechanized Cavalry (SCVMC), a motorcycle-riding special interest group attached to the organization, sent an after-action email to members after a 14 September 2019 rally in Pittsboro, North Carolina, organized in defense of a statue of a Confederate soldier that had stood outside the citys courthouse since 1907. The email reported on the rally as a win for the organization, though the statue was removed by the city the following November.

Smithson noted the presence of 32 SCV members at the event, including James Shillinglaw, an SCV and SCVMC member who is also a member of LOS, which the Southern Poverty Law Center defines as a hate group. Shillinglaw, who attended the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville in 2017, was also in attendance at subsequent rallies in Pittsboro, even after the SCV had ordered members to stand down from the increasingly contentious events.

Smithson also noted the presence of Steve Marley and Laura Ray of ACTBAC, or Alamance County Taking Back Alamance County, another SPLC-designated neo-Confederate hate group. ACTBAC has been active in statue protests in North Carolina at locations including Pittsboro, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Graham.

In Graham on 20 May 2017 more than two years before the event where SCV rubbed shoulders with identified members, and just weeks before Unite the Right an ACTBAC rally was attended by Kyle Rogers, the former webmaster for the Council of Concerned Citizens (CCC). The CCC is the neo-Confederate group whose online propaganda was credited by Dylann Roof as playing a central part in his radicalization in the lead-up to his massacre of black churchgoers in Charleston in 2015.

Also present at the Graham event were two men who were arrested after unfurling a flag associated with white nationalism groups.

Marley, who was a central organizer of the 2019 Pittsboro protest, thanked SCV and SCVMC for their participation in the complete success of the rally in a Facebook post after the event.

He also thanked a range of more radical neo-Confederate groups, including the Hiwaymen, an Arkansas group led by Billy Helton, also known as Billy Sessions. Members of the Hiwaymen have attended contentious protests over statues throughout the south, and have also appeared at violent rallies as far away as Portland, Oregon. Helton has frequently endorsed political violence in social media videos.

Earlier this year, Marley posted footage of his own participation in the Capitol riot on 6 January. In the footage, provided to the Guardian by North Carolina antiracist activist Lindsay Ayling and filmed from Marleys perspective, a large group of people can be seen approaching the Capitol from the exterior, and at one point a mans voice can be heard saying, Were storming the Capitol.

In a post accompanying the video, Marley wrote, If youre one that thinks storming the Capital House was wrong, you might want to quietly exit my FB, and, We made the charge to let the tyrants know that we are here.

The email as seen by the Guardian was forwarded to SCV members by the organizations state leader, R Kevin Stone.

Stone is also the co-founder and self-styled general of SCVMC. That groups motto, Ride as you would with Forrest, refers to Nathan Bedford Forrest, a prominent Confederate cavalry officer whose troops massacred hundreds of men who had already surrendered at the Battle of Fort Pillow, and who was the founder of the Ku Klux Klan. He was its leader when it adopted terror tactics in the face of Reconstruction from the late 1860s.

Stone also sits on the SCVs national executive council, as department commander of the Army of Northern Virginia Department, one of a number of regional sub-groupings of several states whose arrangement is patterned on the command structure of the Confederate army during the US civil war.

Stone works as a probation officer for the North Carolina Department of Public Safety, in a state where, according to the Prison Policy Initiative, 61% of incarcerated people are black.

Stone has reportedly been implicated in an investigation by the North Carolina Board of Elections into the SCV-connected NC Heritage PAC, which has allegedly illegally shuffled money from SCV members to state Republicans.

Smithson and Stone did not immediately respond to emailed requests for comment.

A spokesman for the North Carolina elections board said that campaign finance investigations are confidential under North Carolina law and offered no further comment. The North Carolina department of public safety did not immediately respond to a question on Stones employment status with the agency.

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Neo-Confederates worked with other far-right groups in failed efforts to preserve monuments - The Guardian

Death threats and the KKK: Inside a Black Alabaman’s fight to remove a Confederate statue – Reuters

The second paragraph contains language that may offend some readers.

Ever since Camille Bennett started her campaign to relocate a Confederate statue from outside the county courthouse in her hometown of Florence, Alabama, she has seen it all: threats, violent online messages and intimidation attempts.

There was the suggestion from a white pastor that somebody wire her mouth shut; then there was the time a white motorcyclist sped towards her and two boys during a racial justice march last summer, telling her to "get the fuck out the way."

Bennett has always received pushback for her activism in her small conservative community, but she says her most harrowing experience happened in 2017, when five Ku Klux Klansmen (KKK) in hoods and robes heckled her at a local park during a LGBT Pride event she'd been asked to address.

"I was terrified. I was extremely intimidated," said Bennett, the only Black speaker at the park event. But, she added, "the work brings me an immense sense of joy. I don't let the threats define me."

Lori Feldman, 42, a white woman who supports the removal of the statue honoring soldiers of the pro-slavery Confederacy and moved to Alabama in 2017 from Brooklyn, New York, was present when Klansmen heckled Bennett at a park.

"It was clear they wanted to make a statement of hate," Feldman said of the KKK, a white supremacist group that has terrorized Black communities for over a century. "There were kids who were crying, who were scared."

But intimidation isn't the only obstacle for those committed to removing Confederate symbols. Bennett, like many other Black civil rights advocates and their allies, continues to face legal and political roadblocks at the state, county and city level.

"MY PEOPLE SUFFERED"

Bennett, 43, whose mother is a minister and who is a minister herself, founded the nonprofit Project Say Something in 2014 to push for racial justice for Black Americans.

One of its core missions has been to get Florence to confront the meaning of Eternal Vigil, the ghostly white marble statue of a nameless Confederate private in front of Lauderdale county's courthouse.

During the Civil War of the 1860s, Southern states in the Confederacy fought the North to preserve their economy based on chattel slavery of captive Africans and their descendants born in America.

Over 300 monuments to the Confederacy stand in America, mostly in the South, especially in Alabama, Georgia, North and South Carolina, and Tennessee, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights group.

Many Confederate monuments were erected well after the war - Florence's statue was completed in 1903 - after Reconstruction when white Southern segregationists were working to reverse Black political and economic gains. The monuments have long been symbolic for white supremacists like the KKK, which was founded by Confederate veterans.

The county turned down a proposal by Bennett to erect next to the monument a statue of Dred Scott, who lived in Florence for 10 years in the 1800s and whose effort as an enslaved man to gain freedom led to a landmark Supreme Court ruling. After her proposal was rejected, Bennett called for relocating Eternal Vigil to a Confederate cemetery less than a mile from the courthouse.

But the Lauderdale County Commission's five members, all white Republican men, refused, citing a 2017 state law prohibiting the removal or relocation of monuments.

Camille Bennett poses for a photo in front of the confederate statue that she is trying to have moved to the confederate cemetery in Florence, Alabama, U.S., May 19, 2021. REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant

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That law is part of a larger effort by GOP lawmakers in several states, including Georgia and West Virginia, to prevent the removal of statues following a nationwide movement to topple Confederate monuments. The Republican-backed bill passed in the Alabama legislature despite the opposition of legislators, such as Thomas Jackson of Thomasville, a Black Democrat who spoke of what Confederate statues symbolize for Black Americans.

"My people suffered," Jackson said during debate on the proposal. "Don't bring back those harsh memories that we went through so much to overcome."

Josh Dodd, who is white and chairman of the Lauderdale County Republican Party, is opposed to moving Eternal Vigil. "It's very important to a lot of people to remember the past and to remember those who died on both sides," he said.

The United Daughters of the Confederacy, which funded Florence's statue at the turn of the 20th century, says it adamantly rejects removal.

The group advocates "that all such monuments remain in their original location with their original messaging," its attorney, Jack Hinton, wrote in a letter to an Alabama state senator last year.

The original messaging around Eternal Vigil, as demonstrated by one initial 1903 speech at its unveiling, was explicitly against social equality for Black people in the South.

"OBSTACLES KEEP CHANGING"

Amid nationwide protests against racism following the murder of George Floyd, a Black man, by a white police officer in Minnesota in May 2020, the movement to take down Confederate symbols accelerated. In 2020, over 160 Confederate monuments were taken down, compared to 58 between 2015 and 2019, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Bennett and supporters - Black and white - began marching in central Florence last summer to demand the relocation of Eternal Vigil after Floyd's murder. In July 2020, three Lauderdale County residents filed suit, demanding that the statue remain in place. Their suit calls the statue an "historic and irreplaceable monument."

In October 2020, Florence City Council unanimously passed a resolution backing the relocation of the statue to the cemetery, citing "concerned citizens" who want it relocated and the fact that some residents have agreed to pay the costs of removal. The city built a concrete base in the cemetery for the statue.

But because the statue sits on county property, the city asked the county for permission to remove it.

Danny Pettus, who is white and chairs the county commission, told Reuters he would never support the statue's relocation, citing the 2017 state monument preservation law. Violating the law could result in a $25,000 fine.

Andy Betterton was elected mayor of Florence in November 2020 on a promise to relocate the statue. But now Betterton and members of the county commission say their hands are tied because of the civil lawsuit. The suit is now with a circuit court judge, who has ordered a stay on all actions involving the statue until the litigation is resolved.

Betterton declined to be interviewed by Reuters. In a statement he said the lawsuit has constrained him, but added: "The removal and relocation of the statue is definitely one of my priorities, and I feel optimistic that we will see it removed."

For Bennett the delays feel like obstruction. "There have been several obstacles, and the obstacles keep changing. So you're going to be suspicious that everyone is working together so this monument is not removed," she said.

But she added: One way or another, we will prevail. We will not stop.

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Death threats and the KKK: Inside a Black Alabaman's fight to remove a Confederate statue - Reuters

There are 9 Confederate memorials among the military academies, but their fate is unknown – Military Times

Service academies are some of the first stops for the Defense Departments renaming commission for bases, ships and more that honor the Confederacy, and according to research by the Southern Poverty Law Center, those campuses are home to eight symbols that should be considered.

They include a portrait of alumnus Gen. Robert E. Lee along with Lee Barracks, Lee Gate, Lee Road and the Robert E. Lee Memorial Award and Beauregard Place at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York.

Buchanan House, Buchanan Road and Maury Hall are locations connected to the Confederacy at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

Symbols of white supremacy should never have been associated with the military because they glorify a system of racial oppression and exclusion, Lecia Brooks, SPLCs chief of staff, said in a Wednesday release. As I testified during a Congressional hearing earlier this year, there is no reason to wait three years to rename the Armys 10 bases, nor the militarys numerous ships, roads, buildings, and memorials named after Confederate leaders. The time to act is now.

Brooks went on to call the displays dehumanizing and oppressive, suggesting that they are directly linked to white supremacist activity in the military.

The renaming commission, stood up this year as required by the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act, has until the fall of 2023 to complete renaming projects. The first step is to compile the list.

Visiting West Point is part of that plan, though the military departments will be responsible for submitting their official lists to the commission.

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The memorials at West Point and the Naval Academy are not necessarily under consideration, Army spokeswoman Cynthia Smith told Military Times on Wednesday.

Though the commission is looking beyond base and ship names, as there is no official list compiled yet, she could not say whether Lees portrait, for instance, might be removed from West Point.

Concurrently, SPLC has started its own project, compiling places and things named for the Confederacy.

There are 84 on the list so far, though they include items at The Citadel and the Virginia Military Institute, which are not DoD-affiliated, as well as public memorials in New York City and New Orleans.

Continued here:

There are 9 Confederate memorials among the military academies, but their fate is unknown - Military Times

The Confederate Flag A Symbol of Twisted Thinking – Voices of Monterey Bay

| Adobe Stock photo

| FEATURED

By Carol McKibben

I love taking walks in my Carmel neighborhood where I have lived for more than 20 years with my husband and various members of our family. The eclectic style of homes nestled warren-like in weird neighborhood collections of old cottages, interspersed with modern architecture and warm, friendly community, always makes me appreciate this place even beyond its proximity to one of the most beautiful beaches anywhere on earth.

As a historian, I appreciate Carmels equally eclectic past. Once a great artist colony, it also became an intellectual and political center for Lincoln Steffens and so many others on the left, John Steinbeck among them. The Works Progress Administration installed an office in Carmel to help its majority population of writers and artists find work during the Great Depression. When homophobia raged in America during the Cold War (and into the present), the LBGTQ community found refuge in this liberal-minded town.

It is only very recently that Carmel has been aligned in the public mind with other communities of predominantly white elites. Yet those of us who live in the town know that the community of independent thinkers remains very much a part of life here. When I was out for a walk one day in my neighborhood, I realized with full force how twisted that spirit of nonconformity could become.

I stopped cold in my tracks when I saw a Confederate flag flying from the front porch of my neighbors house; it was a person I routinely exchanged pleasantries with, but clearly someone I didnt know at all.

We are used to seeing that flag brandished in everything from marches for white supremacy to the recent attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6. It is not a benign political symbol. Rather, it is a chilling reminder of the worst of America, one exemplified by hate and violence.

The Confederate flag symbolized the effort in the mid-19th century by people living in states located largely in the American South to sustain and spread an economic system based on the enslavement of other human beings. They justified their view by focusing on melanin in a persons skin and on certain facial features. Humans with more melanin in their skin than others (or were thought to have even a tiny bit more) could be treated as though they were farm animals or farm equipment rather than as human beings. People with more melanin became nonentities, invisible as individual human beings, and were forced to labor unremittingly under the most horrific and cruel conditions without compensation until they died. They were routinely tortured.

Slaveholders treated slave families with ruthless indifference; casually and unceremoniously split them up, sold off individual members like livestock, tore babies and children from their parents, sold them to strangers, and sent away without regard for their vulnerability, health or safety, just like one would treat farm animals or mere commodities. As a result of this horrendous cruelty and cold unconcern, slave families were lost to one another forever. This is what slavery was and worse. None of this is in dispute. It represents one of the most shameful periods in American history and it lasted for hundreds of years.

The enforced slavery of one group of human beings by another based on melanin levels and facial features was both absurd and fiercely defended because it produced great wealth. Slavers went to war and attempted to destroy the entire nation to maintain it with the Confederate flag as an emblem. They even persuaded poorer people, those who looked more like them, to fight too, even when the less well-off did not benefit economically from slave ownership. The Civil War was not about states rights. It was a war fought over whether or not America ought to maintain the evil of slavery as a foundation of its economy. As a country, we decided against it.

The harm slavery produced has lasted for generations and is still with us. It led directly to the development of ideologies such as scientific racism, a pseudo-science that perpetuated the ludicrous and farcical notion of innate inequality based on bizarre definitions of physical appearance.

Scientific racism in turn led to the eugenics movement, which became the rationale for all sorts of policies such as anti-miscegenation laws, citizenship and immigration exclusions, and land ownership restrictions, redlining in cities and towns, racial exclusions in neighborhoods and weirdly assigning property value to the perceived racial identity of the inhabitants. These policies became normative. Although many have been overturned, the absurd ideology behind them persists, invisible and usually denied by those who benefit most from systems of inequality that place people with the least melanin in their skin at the top of a human hierarchy and those with the most at the very bottom.

It will take generations working together to undo the untold damage that these almost incomprehensible, insurmountable wrongs did to millions of people and their children just because they had more melanin in their skin. However, the undoing and rebuilding does not just happen magically over time or just because slavery officially ended or just because we believe that we became more modern and liberal in our thinking.

As a community, we need to challenge these inequalities as we condemn and end this hateful representation of our past embodied in the Confederate flag.

We are in a time of our history in which we cant allow for these displays of racism to go unchallenged, so after some thought I knocked on my neighbors door to ask him to bring it down. At first he seemed reluctant to do it, but eventually the flag went down. Those of us who have benefited the most from this countrys ugly past have a duty to advocate for a more inclusive, fair United States of America.

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The Confederate Flag A Symbol of Twisted Thinking - Voices of Monterey Bay

Social Studies: Hollywood economics, the power of Confederate street names, and untimely arrests – The Boston Globe

Hanssen, A. & Raskovich, A., Does Vertical Integration Spur Investment? Casting Actors to Discover Stars During the Hollywood Studio Era, Journal of Law and Economics (November 2020).

Southern streets

An economist has found that Black people who live in areas with more streets named after Confederate generals are less likely to be employed, are more likely to be in low-status jobs, and have lower wages, relative to whites, even controlling for other socio-economic characteristics of the individual and the studied areas.

Williams, J., Confederate Streets and Black-White Labor Market Differentials, American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings (May 2021).

Borderline deterrence

In surveys conducted in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico while Donald Trump was president, some participants were told that US Immigration had apprehended thousands of their countrymen, while other participants were told not just about the apprehensions but also that their countrymen were placed in long-term detention or denied court hearings. Mentioning those harsh immigration measures made no difference in the share of respondents who intended to migrate.

Ryo, E., The Unintended Consequences of US Immigration Enforcement Policies, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (May 2021).

Born in the wrong year

Examining data on kids in Chicago who were followed into young adulthood, Harvard sociologists found that those born in the early to mid-1980s were more likely to be arrested than those born in the mid-1990s. This was explained not by changes in behavioral, family, or neighborhood characteristics but by broader changes in crime and policing as both crime rates and enforcement fell after the 1990s, especially for drug offenses.

Neil, R. & Sampson, R., The Birth Lottery of History: Arrest Over the Life Course of Multiple Cohorts Coming of Age, 19952018, American Journal of Sociology (March 2021).

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Social Studies: Hollywood economics, the power of Confederate street names, and untimely arrests - The Boston Globe

Allendale shouldnt have a Confederate statue any longer: Activists call for its immediate removal – MLive.com

ALLENDALE, MI -- Now that a citizen committee has recommended replacing a controversial Civil War statue in Allendale, some activists and community members are calling on township leaders to immediately remove it.

Holly Huber, co-founder of the Michigan Association of Civil Rights Activists which has advocated for the statues removal for months, thanked the committee for its recommendation during the Allendale Township Board of Trustees meeting Monday, May 24.

I hope that the board takes that into consideration and votes to immediately remove those statues, Huber said. Theyre offensive and Allendale should not have a Confederate statue any longer.

The Civil War statue, which joins other sculptures representing veterans of U.S. wars in the townships Garden of Honor, depicts a Union and Confederate soldier standing back-to-back with a Black enslaved child at their feet.

On Monday, the townships Garden of Honor Memorial Committee unveiled its final recommendation for the controversial statue: remove the Civil War statue and replace it with one featuring three diverse Union soldiers standing side-by-side.

The soldiers would be Black, white and American Indian, and their likenesses would be based on real West Michiganders who fought for the North in the Civil War.

Related: Confederate soldier statue that drew controversy in West Michigan should be replaced, committee recommends

No one who called in to the Allendale Township Board of Trustees virtual meeting Monday opposed the recommendation. The committees recommendation wasnt made public until the meeting.

Its now up to the township trustees to decide if they want to adopt the recommended changes, partially adopt them, modify them or reject them entirely. That vote will potentially happen at their next meeting on June 14.

Our Board of Trustees is going to take three things into consideration, Township Supervisor Adam Elenbaas told MLive/The Grand Rapids Press on Tuesday of the boards upcoming decision. We need to be able to voice what our community believes and what our community wants to happen. We need to take into consideration our own personal opinions as board members. And we need to take into consideration whats best for the community.

If trustees approve to replace the current statue, it wasnt immediately clear if it would be taken down in the interim while the township goes through the process of finding an artist and having them sculpt the proposed replacement.

The current statue likely wouldnt be destroyed or sold to a private resident. Instead, some options include giving it to a local museum or historical society.

Allendale Township is located about 12 miles west of Grand Rapids and is home to about 26,700 residents. Its also home to Grand Valley State University. The universitys president last summer urged the township to relocate the statue.

Related: How this Confederate soldier statue became part of a veterans memorial in Michigan

Trustees on Monday expressed thanks for the committees work but none directly opined on whether they supported or opposed the recommendations. The recommendations also included adding statues at the Garden of Honor park representing soldiers from three more wars and informational QR codes to the plaques.

You guys just blew me away, Trustee Candy Kraker told the committee members. That is absolutely amazing, all the work that you did. I am just flabbergasted.

For nearly a year, numerous activists and residents have called on the township to remove the statue, with some calling it racist and demeaning to Black people and still more saying a Confederate soldier has no place among honored veterans.

The calls for removal drew pushback from other residents and counterprotesters. Some residents were concerned those who wanted the statue removed didnt live in Allendale, with Treasurer David VanderWall at one meeting saying he isnt one to be bullied or bow to outside pressure.

Some said removing the statue would be erasing history and the lessons it has to teach us.

The debate over the statue began when the Michigan Association of Civil Rights Activists requested the township remove the statue. The 23-year-old memorial was one of numerous public statues and symbols of the Confederacy that faced renewed scrutiny late last spring as demonstrations against police brutality and racial inequality swept the nation.

Mitch Kahle, a co-founder of the group, told trustees during their virtual meeting Monday this whole situation, which included numerous protests and counterprotests over the statues presence, couldve been avoided if they listened to what activists recommended from the get-go.

We recommended that you simply remove the Confederate statue and remove the enslaved child and put a statue of an African-American Union soldier, like Ben Jones, Kahle said. And guess what youre going to end up doing? Exactly what we said one year ago today. So move forward, get rid of the offensive statues or, to be honest, Allendale is going to be

His public comment ended mid-sentence due to the time limit.

The Allendale Township Board of Trustees formed the Garden of Honor Memorial Committee in June, tasking them to examine the statue, and the park it sits in, over small-scale frank conversations with multiple perspectives and then present trustees with recommended changes.

The committee on Monday also recommended the township add statues representing veterans of the MexicanAmerican War, War of 1812 and the U.S. War on Terror.

Additionally, the committee recommended upgrading signage on all of the statues to include QR codes that people could scan with their smartphones and be directed to informational web pages.

Ive been able to have thousands of conversations with people that I wouldnt normally have had, Elenbaas said. The protest leads to those conversations. So I wouldnt say the protests arent so much the influential component, but its the conversations after that follow when people take the time to sit down and express their viewpoints. And I can tell you that I have personally taken a lot out of those conversations. My viewpoints have been widened over the past several months.

Jessica VanBlaricum-Miller, during public comment, questioned why there needed to be a white Union soldier in the proposed new statue.

Why is it that a Black Union soldier cannot be the only one standing and representing? Why include a white man? What purpose does it serve? VanBlaricum-Miller asked. By doing so we are still white centering, which is perpetuating the racism that continues to happen in Allendale. We should allow (Black, Indigenous and people of color) to have a space without needing the support of their oppressor.

The proposed new statue featuring white, Black and American Indian Union soldiers would have the Black soldiers appearance based on Benjamin Jones, an escaped slave who settled in Ottawa County and served as a Union soldier.

The white soldier would be based on Hiram Knowlton, and the American Indian soldier would be based on Louis Little Feather Miskoguon. The statue wouldnt include the soldiers names.

Read more:

Billboard taken down after calling for removal of Confederate statue

New research uncovers the secret history of Black people killed by Detroit police

After nearly five decades in prison, man who denied role in killing to go free

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Allendale shouldnt have a Confederate statue any longer: Activists call for its immediate removal - MLive.com

Local Sons of Confederate Veterans camp to hold memorial – The Albany Herald

ALBANY The Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp 141 in Albany will host its annual Confederate Memorial Service Saturday from 9 a.m.-noon at the CSA Memorial Park on Philema Road.

The observance is held each year during April, which is Confederate History and Heritage Month in the state. The designation was ratified by the Georgia General Assembly in 2009.

The ceremony will pay tribute to the Confederate battle flag, according to SCV Camp 141 Commander James King.

The Confederate flag represents honor, faith, courage, dignity, integrity, chivalry, Christian values, respect for womanhood, strong family ties, patriotism, self-reliance, limited constitutional federal government, states rights, and belief in the free enterprise system, King said in a news release. It symbolizes the noble spirit of the Southern people, the rich heritage, the traditions of the South and the dynamic and vigorous Southern culture. No other symbol so proudly says Dixie as the Cross of St. Andrew waving in the breeze.

Liberals have falsely indoctrinated many black Americans to believe the flag represents racism, bigotry and a painful reminder of slavery. But white Christian Southerners who fly the Confederate battle flag are not the enemy of responsible black Americans who are working to better themselves.

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Saturdays memorial service will include a musical tribute to the Confederate States of America consisting of CSA songs and Southern Gospel. Music will be preformed by Ed Eschman and the band Southern Sounds. The formal memorial service will begin with an invocation by Pastor Bobby Brown, followed by a singalong of the Southern National Anthem, Dixie. George Ray Houston, the poet laurate of the Georgia SCV Division, will read the poem The Long, Lonesome Road.

The events keynote speaker is Eugene Bo Slack, who is the commander of the Sylvester SCV Camp Yancey Independents. He will present a summary of the lives of Christian CSA Gens. Robert E. Lee and Thomas Jonathan Stonewall Jackson. Following Slacks speech, King will read the order and date of the secession of states that formed the Confederate States of America. Descendants of each state who are in attendance will stand to be recognized when the state in which their ancestor served as a soldier is called and a flower will be placed at the CSA Monument in memory of the soldiers of that CSA state.

A rifle and cannon salute by re-enactors in Confederate uniform will be followed by a singalong of Amazing Grace and the event will conclude with a benediction by Brown.

All members of the public who have an interest in Confederate history and heritage are invited to attend. For additional information contact King at jkingantiquearms@bellsouth.net or (229) 854-1944.

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Local Sons of Confederate Veterans camp to hold memorial - The Albany Herald

6 Confederate memorials could be removed from the Texas Capitol if state bill passes – KXAN.com

AUSTIN (Nexstar) State lawmakers on Monday are considering a bill that would remove certain Confederate monuments and memorials, and rename other parts of the Capitol Complex, due to Confederate ties.

Before laying out the bill in the House Committee on Culture, Recreation and Tourism, the author of the bill, Rep. Rafael Anchia, (D Dallas), held a press conference to rally support for the bill.

Confederate artifacts are undeniably a representation of hate, racism, and oppression, Rep. Anchia said, Theyre an insult to the many descendants of slavery to the many people who visit our Capitol today, in the state of Texas, and the intent of admission of the Confederacy are clear and indisputable.

The bill would require the removal of the following monuments from Capitol grounds:

It would also rename the John H. Reagan Building to the Jackson-Webber Building in honor of Nathaniel Jackson and John Webber.

Those testifying against the bill on Monday said the bill would be erasing history.

David Wylie, Republican Party of Texas, testified that it would in fact be rewriting history.

I cant agree with that. This calls for the removal of things that reminds people of where weve been, Wylie said, It shows what weve been through, and where we are today.

But, Rep. Anchia countered that the existing monuments rewrite history, and misrepresent the intent of the Civil War.

Instead of using tax dollars to celebrate and glorify people who are secessionists, people who were traitors to America, and people who wanted to preserve an institution, where one human could own another human and force that human to do labor on their behalf, raped that other human, own their children and their progeny as if they were property, we seek to change that, Rep. Anchia said.

The hearing for the bill is continuing into the evening, with 30 witnesses signed up to testify.

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6 Confederate memorials could be removed from the Texas Capitol if state bill passes - KXAN.com

An Atlanta Suburb Removed a Confederate Monument That Featured an Apparently Fake Winston Churchill Quote About Heritage – artnet News

A county in the Atlanta suburbs has removed a Confederate monument that stood on the grounds of the Gwinnett County Historic Courthouse in Lawrenceville.

The decision is the latest win for the growing movement to remove monuments to hate. But this particular monument had two especially dubious distinctions. First, it was put in place exceptionally late. According to Michael Diaz-Griffiths Anti-Racist Preservationists Guide to Confederate Monuments, a great many monuments to the Lost Cause of the Confederacy were erected between 1890 and 1920, decades after the Civil War, and in the 1950s and 60speriods marked by advances in civil rights. The Lawrenceville monument was erected in 1993 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans. (Sadly, it is not the most recent.)

Second, it bears a quote supposedly from Sir Winston Churchill: Any people with contempt for their heritage have lost faith in themselves and no nation can long survive without pride in its [sic] traditions.But one expert in misinformation says those words never came out of Churchills mouth.

Loren Collins, an Atlanta lawyer and author of Bullspotting: Finding Facts in the Age of Misinformation, questioned the quote as soon as he heard of it. Theres a whole chapter on spurious quotations in my book, he said, so that set off some alarms for me. When I searched online, most of the results were just neo-Confederate sites, which doesnt necessarily prove its not legit, of course, but I just couldnt find any credible source.

Among the earliest appearances of the phrase that he can find comes from Southerners Left a Legacy of Courage, a 1990 editorial in VirginiasDaily Press defending Civil War reenactments. Another, from around the same time, comes from a newspaper ad placed by the Sons of Confederate Veterans. That makes me wonder, he said, whether it was just circulating among those groups in their newsletters and pamphlets or whatnot.

More recently, he says, I came across a 1992 article about the monument in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Memorial Issue Resurrects Painful Past. It includes several letters from readers, and one of them uses this quote, which makes me wonder whether thats the way it ended up on the monument!

The5,800-pound granite monument features an early Confederate flag as part of its imagery.Protesters calling for the removal of the monument pointed out that Charles H. Hale, a Black man, was lynched just a few yards from the site in 1911. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People had previously called on Governor Nathan Deal to tear it down in 2017 after the deadly violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.

It has been placed in storage, according to the county, while court proceedings decide its fate. A state law prohibits the removal of Confederate monuments except for reasons of preservation, protection, and interpretation, according to ABC. A new Democratic majority of county commissioners found that two recent acts of vandalism made the monument a threat to public safety.

It will not remove 150 years of hatred and white supremacy, but its a damn good start, said commissioner Kirkland Carden of the decision. This has no place in a modern-day Gwinnett County.

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An Atlanta Suburb Removed a Confederate Monument That Featured an Apparently Fake Winston Churchill Quote About Heritage - artnet News

2 Confederate statues were removed in Georgia within 3 days – CNN

One such vandalism was the catalyst for the removal of the Confederate monument that stood outside the Gwinnett County Courthouse in Lawrenceville.

According to the release, the 28-year-old monument was vandalized during protests in June 2020, prompting a lawsuit filed by Gwinnett County Solicitor-General Brian Whiteside that sought to have the monument declared a public nuisance and have it removed.

It was vandalized again on Thanksgiving, which led to the board making the decision to put it in "an appropriate storage facility for protection and preservation until the court provides further direction or the lawsuit is resolved," the release said.

"A monument celebrating the Confederacy on county property is inconsistent with the message of welcome and inclusion that the County is sending to the world. We should place it in storage to avoid further provocation and to help the cause of tranquility for the benefit of all," Chairwoman Nicole Hendrickson said in the press release.

Commissioner Kirkland Carden said in the release that it was "time to remove this monument of hate that has been a stain on Gwinnett County since it was erected in 1993," adding that "removing this monument is a step in the right direction."

Statue moved to historic house

A statue of Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston was relocated from downtown Dalton to the historic Huff House Saturday by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, who own the statue, city of Dalton spokesman Bruce Frazier told CNN.

Dalton sits just 16 miles south of the Tennessee border in the northwest corner of Georgia.

"The statue of General Johnston is the property of the United Daughters of the Confederacy which commissioned it and placed it downtown in 1912," Dalton told CNN.

The historic Huff House was the headquarters of General Johnston "during the Confederate Army of Tennessee's winter encampment in Dalton for about six months from December 1863 to May 1864," Robert D. Jenkins, Sr., attorney for the United Daughters of the Confederacy, said in a statement to CNN.

"It is a logical place for the statue where the history of the man, the statue and the house may all be interpreted and visited," Jenkins explained.

Jenkins said that the removal process didn't require any votes or come after any attempts to destroy the statue.

"No one involved in this process has intimated or attempted to tear down or destroy the statue or the history of it," he said, adding that the United Daughters of the Confederacy "simply wanted it moved from a public property and were willing to pay for its relocation."

"In many communities across our country, unfortunately, similar circumstances have led to violence," said Jenkins. "In Dalton, however, the various parties have worked together to find and to carry out a good solution. We hope that the new location of the statue will lead to greater interest to and support of the Huff House," Jenkins said.

Frazier confirmed to CNN that the measure was never voted on by a mayor or council and "the issue never appeared on any city agenda."

Confederate monument to be replaced with John Lewis statue

These are not the first Confederate monuments in the state of Georgia to be removed.

The city had argued the statue had become a threat to public safety during recent protests and wanted it to be put in storage until they could find another place to put it.

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2 Confederate statues were removed in Georgia within 3 days - CNN

The Real Reason the Confederate Flag Bothers Me | Opinion – Harvard Crimson

As I watched the insurrection at the United States Capitol unfold last month, I was surprised at the amount of diversity I saw throughout the crowd. Im not talking about cultural, racial, or even religious diversity, but rather the myriad of different flags and related political symbols littered across the Capitol. On the one hand, some of these flags were familiar: The Betsy Ross flag of the original 13 colonies and the generic Trump 2020 and MAGA banners were all strewn across Capitol Hill. On the other hand, I saw many I didn't recognize. There was a white flag with a red cross, a yellow flag with three red stripes, a green flag with black and white stripes, and many more.

However, one flag stood out to me from among the rest, and it was the one I had seen countless times before. With its sharp red background and intersecting blue stripes filled with white stars, the Confederate flag stuck out from the sea of colors. I eventually learned that many of the unfamiliar flags represented various far-right movements that I detest, ranging from QAnon to the Proud Boys. Still, the presence of the Confederate flag bothered me the most.

Why? So many of these movements start from the same misinformed hate, but that specific flag bothered me more.

This is the question I asked myself as I struggled to understand the reasoning behind the flag's appearance at the Capitol. As a Black person, that Confederate flag has always represented the beliefs of a people who fought to uphold the enslavement of my entire race. And while not everyone has this same background, what has always confused me is that it seems that the most outwardly patriotic Americans are the same ones who fly the Confederate flag with pride. Its paradoxical the Confederates took up arms against the beloved Union, so their existence should be hated, right? Clearly not, and for many, it is the exact opposite.

A poll taken by the Morning Consult and Politico in July of 2020 found that 43 percent of voters still believe that the Confederate flag represents Southern pride including 74 percent of Republicans. Its unnerving. And this revision of history doesnt seem to just stop with the flag. There seems to be a prevailing theme throughout America that the United States Civil War was about anything but slavery.

For example, in December of last year, a popular conservative media company, PragerU, posted a now-deleted video defending Confederate general Robert E. Lees legacy, going so far as to imply that one of his greatest accomplishments was crushing an attempted slave rebellion by radical abolitionist John Brown. PragerU isnt a small company; it has more than 2.86 million subscribers on Youtube and has amassed over a billion views on its videos. Millions of people are consuming and further spreading this material, and it only continues the cycle of misinformation.

Still, many people who understand the history of the Civil War do believe that it is an important enough reason to put away the Confederate flag, but to them, the issue just seems trivial. Ive heard many comments like, Why are we worrying about this, arent there much more prevalent issues in the world right now? and The Civil War ended ages ago things can change, right? Or, ironically, Most Black people dont even care that much, so lets just move on.

And surprisingly, I somewhat agree. The Confederate flag itself isnt the most pressing issue in the world, and it isnt even too common in urban areas where most Americans live. However, the real issue is that the flag represents the distrust many Americans have of scientific and historical consensus.

It doesnt surprise me that 15 percent of Americans believe we have currently taken enough steps to fight climate change or that 10 percent of us believe vaccines cause autism, with 46 percent unsure. If issues like these remain contested, what do we expect to do for more layered problems like healthcare, immigration, and education reform? These people are our voting population and when 43 percent of them still cannot recognize what the Confederate flag truly stands for, its not surprising that America is extremely slow to move forward.

So to answer my own question, the Confederate flag bothers me because it represents the deep dissemination of falsehoods into society that powerful actors don't do enough to dismantle. Harvard affiliates benefit from the social clout the school carries, and that should come with the responsibility to push back against false information. Many Harvard graduates go on to fill powerful leadership roles within society, and their voices all hold weight. As a collective, we can fight against many of the false narratives pushed in society.

We live in a democracy, and the people themselves have to agree on our history before any meaningful social change can occur. This just hasnt happened yet. While I continue to be optimistic, something tells me that America is in for a very long ride towards reunification with fact.

Julius E. Ewungkem 24 is a Crimson Editorial editor.

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The Real Reason the Confederate Flag Bothers Me | Opinion - Harvard Crimson

Review: How an ex-slave and a Confederate hero joined forces during the Jim Crow era – Waterbury Republican American

About 500 St. Louisans gathered in 1914 for the dedication of a Confederate memorial in Forest Park, where Bennett H. Young, commander-in-chief of the United Confederate Veterans Association, eulogized the bravery and bitter determination of the 600,000 Southern men who fought for a cause they believed to be right. Young, an apologist for the Confederacy, played a key role in littering the country with memorials to the Lost Cause, but, as in all things, his story is complicated.

Just 15 years earlier, this man who rode during the war with John Hunt Morgan and later authored a paean to Confederate horsemen, including Nathan Bedford Forrest, represented a formerly enslaved person in one of the most sensational trials of the Jim Crow era.

Its a story retold, with riveting details and context, in A Shot in the Moonlight, a new book by Ben Montgomery, former enterprise reporter for the Tampa Bay Times.

The story begins in 1897, when a group of white farmers in Simpson County, Ky., paid a nighttime visit to the home of George Dinning, a poor Black farmer, and accused him of stealing. They gave Dinning and his family 10 days to leave the county and abandon his 125-acre farm. Dinning insisted he was no thief, and reputable white men would back him up, but these night riders shot into the house, and Dinning was wounded. He returned fire, they unloaded their guns, then retreated. One of the party, a wealthy farmers son named Jodie Conn, was mortally wounded. Dinning turned himself in to the sheriff. While he was in custody, the vigilantes returned to his home, forced his wife and children to flee, then burned everything to the ground.

Dinning likely would have been lynched, except the sheriff quickly got him out of town. When Dinning was brought back to Franklin to stand trial, Gov. William O. Bradley, a Republican and outspoken foe of racial violence and lynching, ordered the Kentucky militia to protect the jail and courtroom.

Dinning was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to seven years hard labor. But Dinnings cause, by then, had aroused statewide and even national sympathy and Bradley granted Dinning a full pardon, saying Dinning did no more than any other man would or should have done under the same circumstances.

Now a free man, Dinning and his family relocated to Jeffersonville, Ind. across the Ohio River from Louisville. Bennett Young, who had followed newspaper coverage of the Simpson County trial and who was among those who called on Bradley to pardon Dinning, agreed to take Dinnings case against his assailants to federal court. By testifying in the Simpson County case, Dinnings white neighbors had succeeded in implicating themselves.

Youngs courtroom performance, eviscerating the defenses arguments, was carried widely by sympathetic papers, including the Post-Dispatch, which said the old Confederate delivered a speech rarely equaled for passionate earnestness. On May 5, 1899, an all-white jury returned a verdict of $50,000 in Dinnings favor an astounding result, given the times and widely reported at the time.

Montgomery does more than resurrect this old story; he digs deep into trial testimony, newspaper records and archives and weaves a richly textured and dramatic story that underscores a truth of the Jim Crow era that Black people faced oppression with great courage and resilience, and that their fearlessness and moral rectitude made even unreconstructed apologists for an unjust system bend. But only to a point Youngs crowning lifetime achievement was the erection of a 351-foot obelisk honoring Jefferson Davis in Fairview, Ky., Davis birthplace.

Dinning, who at some point changed the spelling of his surname to Denning, died in obscurity in 1930 and is buried in a now-unmarked grave in Jeffersonville. He only received a fraction of the money he was awarded and never recovered his Kentucky property. Twenty years ago, part of his story was featured in an Associated Press series about Black farmers being driven off their land.

Asked recently whether Dinning and his family actually received justice, his great-grandson, Anthony Denning, paused a moment.

Thats a tough question. For me, no. He was forced to leave the farm he had farmed for 14 years, Denning said in an online discussion hosted by the Topeka, Kan., public library. He did sue, and he did win. But you have to read the book to get the rest of the story.

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Review: How an ex-slave and a Confederate hero joined forces during the Jim Crow era - Waterbury Republican American

Confederate relics still standing at many Texas universities – The Texas Tribune

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This summer, students called on the University of Texas at Austin to stop playing the The Eyes of Texas, the alma mater song that has historical minstrel show ties. Aggies petitioned Texas A&M University to take down the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Sul Ross, a former governor and Confederate general. Students at Rice University demanded removal of the monument of the school founder, William Willy Rice, a slave owner.

This wasnt the first time Texas universities had faced these pressures. But as students joined protests across the nation condemning the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and called for an end to racial injustice, they turned to their university leaders to address those ills on campus. School officials pledged to act.

But eight months later, the song is still playing at UT-Austin. Statues of Confederate leaders and segregationists still watch over Texas campuses. And many students of color feel most of their demands have been ignored or intentionally mired in lengthy, bureaucratic processes intended to delay answers to difficult questions.

The fact that its taking so long is disheartening, said Kendall Vining, a Rice junior, who co-wrote a list of 19 ways administrators could create a campus more inclusive for Black students. It means that, of course, somebody else is still trying to decide what's best for us, rather than us literally telling them what could be done to help.

While Texas campuses are implementing some significant changes like diversity training, increased scholarships for students of color, new curriculum on racial inequity and more recruitment for diverse faculties many students said the efforts dont directly address their demands or go far enough to dismantle the legacy of white supremacy on their campuses. Black students, who remain underrepresented on most large college campuses in the state, said the buildings and statues that remain serve as a reminder that they attend schools that werent intended to serve them.

When we have people who dont know what it feels like to be oppressed try to make decisions about the oppressed, they often overlook the real demands and they only see racism from their narrow point of view, said Qynetta Caston, a student at Texas A&M where just 3% of students are Black.

University leaders admit there is much work to be done, and insist they remain committed to change. In June and July, university leaders announced a variety of new initiatives aimed at correcting long-standing, institutional wrongs on campus. For example, the Texas A&M System approved $100 million in scholarship funding to boost diversity at all 11 campuses, and the University of North Texas launched a mandatory cultural competency training for all new students starting this fall. Texas A&M University-Commerce partnered with the George Floyd Foundation to start a new internship program for Black male students.

Yet Black students across the state grew frustrated as school officials relegated some of the hardest questions to newly assembled diversity committees. They worry universities are using committees to stall until outspoken students graduate.

But school leaders argue broad, cultural change takes time.

Theres always a desire to move faster and do it better, said Joe Carpenter, a spokesperson for the University of Texas at Arlington, where students were asking administrators to increase faculty of color and rename multiple buildings even before Floyds death. Some things, to be done right, take the involvement, not of one individual to just dictate something. Some of these initiatives aren't going to be successful if they're the idea of one person or if they are implemented by one person.

Its like the administration really believes that white supremacy is a reformable thing, rather than something that needs to be completely wiped away.

As cities across America watched protests fill the streets, dozens of universities removed statues and renamed campus buildings named for people with racist histories.

The University of Mississippi moved a statue out of the main building to a campus cemetery. The University of Alabama removed plaques honoring students who fought for the Confederate Army. In Las Vegas, the University of Nevada took down a statue of their Rebel mascot. Princeton University renamed colleges named after former President Woodrow Wilson due to his racist beliefs. Louisiana State University took the name of a former school president off its library because he advocated for segregation.

But Texas universities have largely dodged demands to remove historical reminders countering with committees vowing to study the issue and other offerings to improve diversity.

Its like the administration really believes that white supremacy is a reformable thing, rather than something that needs to be completely wiped away, said Shifa Rahman, a Rice University junior who organized sit-ins at the statue of Willy Rice. Rice set aside money before he died that helped establish the school in 1912 with the specific goal of serving white Texans.

A group of students at Rice have participated in the sit-ins nearly every evening since Aug. 31.

Rahman said administrators cant expect students to study among symbols of people who promoted white supremacy and still build an equitable campus. These symbols need to be abolished, he said.

Students at Rice dont just want the statue removed. A list of demands also included more Black faculty and improved lighting for Rice identification photos so students with dark skin are properly photographed.

In 2019, Rice launched a task force to explore the universitys historical connections to slavery, segregation and racial injustice, but has not released a report yet. President David Leebron said in an email to The Texas Tribune that they expected this work to take between two and four years. He also said they recently added a group to the task force who will discuss buildings and statues on campus, including the Willy Rice statue.

We have repeatedly said that the statue issue would be addressed after the task force finishes its initial report and we have all the information and all the varied opinions essential to making the right decision, Leebron said. As you might expect, there is a wide range of opinions on the statue and various alternatives have been suggested for addressing the history behind it, which is why its important to approach this issue thoughtfully.

In the meantime, Rice, where 5% of students are Black, announced a new diversity training and is piloting a diversity course this spring. Rice also hired its first vice provost for diversity, equity and inclusion.

Texas students agitating for change said their patience is wearing thin.

For every action that the university takes, there has to be like a committee, and then another committee to verify that committee and were just like in the cycle of committees, said Alcess Nonot, a senior at UT-Austin and president of the UT Senate of College Councils.

UT-Austin administrators pledged to review the schools diversity and inclusion action plan in the wake of the summer protests. The university had already taken down multiple Confederate statues in 2017, which resulted in at least one lawsuit that the university won. They also launched a new committee to study the history of the schools alma mater song, The Eyes of Texas, after students asked the university to stop singing it. The song premiered at a minstrel show in the early 1900s and the phrase Eyes of Texas was taken indirectly from comments Gen. Robert E. Lee used to make to students when he became a college president that the eyes of the South are upon you.

The University of Texas at Arlington, Baylor University, the University of Houston and Texas A&M University all similarly launched diversity committees.

Former Texas A&M President Michael Young set an Oct. 30 deadline for a final report with recommendations to improve race relations, diversity and address historical representations on campus, specifically the Sul Ross statue. Almost three months later, the committee has still not released a report.

A spokesperson said once the committee started meeting they realized it would take longer to delve into the issues and did not want to rush the process. However, system President John Sharp said in August, citing an attorney general opinion, the statue could only be moved by an act of the Legislature. Sharp said in a 2018 letter to the Aggie student newspaper that the statue would be on campus "forever" because Ross deserved to be honored for his service to the university.

At Baylor, university leaders launched a new scholarship program and created a new diversity training video, though it was largely panned by students and the Baylor Lariat student newspaper's editorial board as "missing the mark." A commission to review historical representations on campus, including statues of the three university founders, is expected to issue recommendations this spring.

Students like Lexy Bogney, a senior and president of the Baylor National Association for the Advancement of Colored People chapter, said they suspect these commissions and committees are used to placate alumni and donors that might disagree with student demands.

Even when [Baylor was] just saying, Black Lives Matter, you could see so many alumni on Twitter and Facebook, just saying, Why would you guys fall for this? Bogney said. I think this slow change is kind of coming from them trying to appease regents and alumni.

Indeed, alumni and donors at many Texas schools have been vocal in countering student demands for change, flooding university inboxes with threats to pull their money and even organizing counter protests, as they did at Texas A&M to support the Sul Ross statue.

In some cases, universities resistant to removing statues are erecting new ones honoring people of color. Texas A&M is building a statue of Matthew Gaines, one of the first Black state senators in Texas.

Students have been pushing for the Gaines statue since the 1990s, struggling to raise the necessary funds until last year. For Caston and other students, adding a statue of a Black man doesnt negate the presence of the Sul Ross statue.

Students echoed the same concern at Texas State University after the university announced it would rename two buildings on campus after distinguished alumni of color instead of renaming Flowers Hall, which is named after John Flowers, who defended segregation, and Beretta Hall, which is named after Sally Beretta, a Daughter of the Confederacy.

Until they actually acknowledge the real issues that they have helped create and maintain over the years, they can never be diverse and inclusive, said Evan Bookman, a senior who serves as the universitys NAACP chapter president.

A spokesperson for Texas State said the university will also name two previously unnamed streets at the campus north of Austin after distinguished alumni of color, too.

Questions about renaming Beretta and Flowers Halls have arisen in task force discussions, said spokesperson Jayme Blaschke, without answering additional questions. This will be an on-going inclusive conversation about complex issues that require collaboration and time to fully research.

UT-Austin, where just 5% of students are Black, is also erecting multiple new statues on campus rather than renaming buildings at the request of students. Theyre building a statue of the first group of Black undergraduate students, known as the Precursors, and built another of Julius Whittier, the first African-American letterman on the Longhorns football team.

UT-Austin was one of the only universities in the state that renamed a building in the wake of the summer protests. The Robert L. Moore Building became the Physics, Math and Astronomy Building. Moore was a decorated professor who opposed integration.

Still, students hoped the university would go farther. They had demanded that UT-Austin remove an additional statue and rename six more areas of campus including T.S. Painter Hall. Painter was the university president when Heman Sweatt sued after he was denied admission to UT Law School because he was Black, culminating in the Supreme Court case, Sweatt v. Painter. The university lost, allowing Sweatt to be the first Black person to attend UT Law School in 1950.

Instead of renaming Painter Hall, UT-Austin officials said they would name an entranceway to the building after Sweatt and create a space to honor Sweatt within the building.

It was actually kind of offensive, said Audra Collins, a computer science major at UT-Austin and president of the Association of Black Computer Scientists. To honor Heman Sweatt, you want to put a plaque or dedicate the entrance to the building of his oppressor?

UT-Austins Vice Provost for Diversity Edmund Gordon is leading the effort to honor Sweatt and said he understands the students perspective.

The notion that to just name an entrance after Sweatt within a building named after Painter is ironical, he said. But I would like to be able to continually demonstrate that irony rather than have it changed.

Gordon opposed previous decisions at UT-Austin to remove Confederate statues because he thinks it lets people forget the history and policies that have allowed Black students to remain underrepresented and underserved on campus.

He remembers when the UT System renamed a residence hall that was previously named for William Stewart Simkins, a former UT law professor who fought in the Confederacy and was a member of the Ku Klux Klan. The residence was named after Simkins in the 1950s to intimidate Black students after the Supreme Court decision that integrated schools.

If you ask students if they know what the name of [the residence hall] was before, its completely been erased from our memory, Gordon said. And I think thats a problem.

Students also wanted school leaders to address the impact of policing at their own universities. Those calls grew louder as students and activists across the country called for cities to defund police departments and reallocate money to other services.

Systemic racism [has] been developing for centuries. There are no magic wands to wave.

University of Houston graduate students demanded UH stop contracting with Houston police, citing police shootings among city officers there. They also called for anti-racism training for university officers. Other students said majority Black events are over-policed on campus.

Officials launched a slew of committees and work groups to examine UH policies, including policing and security.

University leaders are currently reviewing work group recommendations for possible approval, but no official changes have been made. Students criticized university leaders for not making more tangible changes, arguing there have been too many conversations about racial injustice without meaningful action. A spokesperson defended the universitys efforts.

Our work to confront racial injustice continues, and it remains a University priority, said UH spokesperson Shawn Lindsay. Systemic racism [has] been developing for centuries. There are no magic wands to wave.

Students said theyve watched universities act quickly in other instances.

Typically, if the school administration wants something done relatively quick, it takes a few strokes of a pen, and it's done, said Brian Kirksey, vice president of the Black Student Union This is something that's been an ongoing conversation for a few months now...It's definitely frustrating.

As students across Texas continue to push for change, Black students at Baylor University said they were reminded last semester that true inclusivity and equity will take more than removing statues and adding new scholarships.

This fall, the university would not allow a Black fraternity to show a video that broadly condemned police brutality in the nation as part of an annual family weekend talent show.

Administrators told students it was inappropriate for the intended audience, according to multiple students. Instead, school officials held a separate pre-recorded Zoom discussion about systemic racism on campus with students and faculty where the video was aired.

Inappropriate for the intended audience meant that Baylor did not want to exhibit a video concerning the daily life that we African Americans must live in every day to their intended audience of the white majority, the fraternity said in a statement on Instagram in September.

Baylor administrators defended their decision to move the video to another platform to the Tribune and said the video was viewed more than it would have been at the talent show, which people had to pay to access.

But Black students, who total 6% of student body, said administrators were still limiting when its appropriate to talk about race. The earlier statements from university leaders of support for Black lives over the summer started to ring hollow.

Clearly, that was just another learning opportunity for Baylor to see that they can't pick and choose when they want to stand on different platforms and what they support, said senior Mya Ellington-Williams.

Disclosure: Baylor University, Facebook, Rice University, Texas A&M University, the University of Texas at Arlington, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Houston and the University of North Texas have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Confederate relics still standing at many Texas universities - The Texas Tribune