Guardian Reports on Richmond’s Confederate Statue Graveyard and What Will Happen Next

The Guardian recently visited the secret location where Richmond’s dismantled Confederate statues are being stored. Here are substantial segments from its report:

Richmond, Virginia, removed likenesses of Confederate generals after 2020’s protests. Now they’re in a statue graveyard.

The storage wasteland, whose exact location has been withheld for security reasons, is a carefully organized graveyard of America’s racist past. The remains of Gen Robert E Lee – glorified by a statue that is 60ft tall and was once the largest on Richmond’s Monument Avenue – takes up about half the space. In the background is a slab dedicated to “Stonewall” Jackson, who earned his nickname at the first battle of Manassas, fought only 30 miles south of Washington, DC at the start of the civil war (1861-65).

The stone and bronze generals and politicians were removed from the streets by the city council in the aftermath of protests that broke out in May 2020, following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Once the capital of the secessionist and slave-owning American south, Richmond recently transferred ownership of the fallen memorials to the Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia.

It is now up to the institution to decide what to do with them.

Should they be returned to the streets, or destroyed? Should they be contextualized and put on display? Or perhaps the bronze should be melted down, with the hundreds of tons of marble and granite put to use elsewhere?

Mary C Lauderdale – the Black History Museum’s director of collections – is clear on two things: that the decision will be made “in agreement with the community” (“we’re already surveying the residents”, she notes) and that she doesn’t want the statues in the museum’s headquarters – a former barracks that housed Virginia’s first detachment of Black soldiers.

“[The statues] are too big for our space… [they] would require us to strengthen security against possible attacks by white supremacist groups,” she adds.

Another certainty is that the rush to tear them down will not influence the speed of the subsequent steps taken by the authorities. “It will take us a long time. I estimate at least five years, maybe 10,” Lauderdale explains, as she walks among the stone blocks that formed the pedestals of the monuments….

Each dismantled element has a code so it can be easily reassembled if necessary.

The bronze figures at one end of the site are wrapped in white plastic material, reminiscent of a shroud, to avoid attracting the attention of drivers who use the nearby highway. Lauderdale says the museum’s staff worry about vandals, extremist groups and collectors of historical memorabilia.

Disassembly and storage was done by Devon Henry. In 2020, the contractor received a call from the then governor, Ralph Northam.

“I had to think about it a lot, above all, because of my family, because of the violence and hatred that sparked the controversy with the statues,” he explains. “In the end, I made up my mind: if we didn’t do it now – if I didn’t do it – perhaps what we descendants of enslaved people have been chasing for decades would never come.” Later, he learned that “two dozen companies” had rejected the offer.

Henry says that every time he was asked to remove a statue, the authorities gave him “24-hour security”. He had to go to work “wearing a bulletproof vest”. “Every time we removed one [statue], the calls and messages on the answering machine rained down with threats like: ‘Hello, we’re from the Ku Klux Klan; you knocked down our memories, now it’s our turn to go after you and yours.’ When this article is published, we’ll definitely receive a few more.”

His demolition job finished last December, when he removed the statue of Confederate Gen AP Hill, which has since been kept in the secret warehouse, with its head dishonorably stuck in a tire, waiting to be wrapped up in white plastic.

Hill was second-in-command of the Confederate army near the end of the war.

Henry estimates that he has dismantled 24 structures between Richmond and Charlottesville. In response to the “million dollar question” of what he would do with the monuments if the decision were up to him, he replies: “I don’t think they should be on the street in full view of my children. They cannot be taught without context that explains the racism that lies behind that glorification.”

 

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