Teddy Roosevelt Statue Removed from American Museum of Natural History–In the Middle of the Night – nativenewsonline.net

Posted: January 24, 2022 at 9:40 am

DetailsBy Jenna KunzeJanuary 21, 2022

The controversial Theodore Roosevelt statue was quietly removed from its decades-long perch in front of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City Wednesday night by museum contractors.

The planned removal was completed around 1 a.m. Thursday morning, when a crane removed the bronze portion of the statue, museum spokesperson Scott Rohan wrote in an email to Native News Online. The remaining base of the statue will be removed throughout the week, and the restoration of the plaza will continue through the spring.

The statue, which depicts racial hierarchy, with Theodore Roosevelt on horseback flanked by a Native American man and an African-American man on either side below him, will be stored in New York as it is prepared for shipping, Rohan said. It is slated to be repurposed in a contextualized exhibit at the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library in Mendora, North Dakota.

The New York Department of Transportation required that the statues removal happen at night for safety reasons and to minimize disruption to traffic and pedestrians, Rohan wrote. These are the designated hours for this type of work.

But that hasnt historically been the case for statue removals. In April 2018, the city and the Museum of the City of New York removed a public statue of J. Marion Sims from 5th Avenue and East 103rd St. in East Harlem, during daylight hours as spectators watched and cheered. Sims was a 19th century surgeon who experimented on enslaved women, without anesthesia. He was also known as the father of gynecology.

This past November, New York City removed its Thomas Jefferson statue from City Hall, because of the former presidents history of owning slaves. According to reports at the time, work crews spent hours moving the statue, also during daytime hours.

The fate of the so-called "Equestrian Statue" has been in limbo since June 2020, when the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis begat nationwide protests against racism. But Indigenous, African American, and other people living in the City have long objected to the statue, for the racial hierarchy the statue portrays and for the land allotment system Roosevelt championed, at the cost of displacing Natives of more than 230 million acres of their land.

Roosevelt is also remembered for his support of eugenics, and his public address in 1886 where he said: I dont go so far as to think that the only good Indians are the dead Indians, but I believe nine out of every 10 are. And I shouldnt like to inquire too closely into the case of the tenth.

Of African Americans, Roosevelt wrote, As a race and in the mass they are altogether inferior to the whites.

In response to last years protests, the City of New York, which owns the building and property housing the American Museum of Natural History and the steps where the statue sits, agreed to take it down. Mayor Bill de Blasio backed the decision, saying the problematic statue explicitly depicts Black and Indigenous people as subjugated and racially inferior.

Native Americans in North Dakota are wary of receiving it. United Tribes Technical College President Leander McDonald (Spirit Lake Tribe) previously told Native News Online that using the statue to portray the true history of Roosevelt could be educational.

If they're going to have something there that provides an accurate history of this president and how he felt towards tribal and Black people, then maybe theres an educational opportunity for the public, he said. If thats truly going to happen.

The truth about Indian Boarding Schools

This month, were asking our readers to help us raise $10,000 to fund our year-long journalism initiative called The Indian Boarding School Project: A Dark Chapter in History. Our mission is to shine a light on the dark era of forced assimilation of native American children by the U.S. government and churches. Youll be able to read stories each week and join us for Livestream events to understand what the Indian Boarding School era has meant to Native Americans and what it still means today.

This news will be provided free for everyone to read, but it is not free to produce. Thats why were asking you to make a donation this month to help support our efforts. Any contribution of any amount big or small gives us a better, stronger future and allows us to remain a force for change.Donate to Native News Online today and support independent Indigenous journalism. Thank you.

About The Author

Staff Writer

Jenna Kunze is a reporter for Native News Online and Tribal Business News. Her bylines have appeared in The Arctic Sounder, High Country News, Indian Country Today, Smithsonian Magazine and Anchorage Daily News. In 2020, she was one of 16 U.S. journalists selected by the Pulitzer Center to report on the effects of climate change in the Alaskan Arctic region. Prior to that, she served as lead reporter at the Chilkat Valley News in Haines, Alaska. Kunze is based in New York.

Visit link:

Teddy Roosevelt Statue Removed from American Museum of Natural History--In the Middle of the Night - nativenewsonline.net

Related Posts