When the Daughters of the Confederacy Wanted a Statue Dedicated to “Loyal Mammies”

The United Daughters of the Confederacy were one of the most effective women’s organizations in the South in the early 20th Century. They fostered the Lost Cause narrative of a Confederacy unbesmirtched by slavery, erected many Confederate monuments, and tried to rehabilitate the image of the Ku Klux Klan. The New York Times has an article on the group’s attempt in the 1920s to erect a statue to African American “mammies” who “stayed loyal” to their owners during the Civil War.

a history professor at the University of Delaware, the article says:

In 1923, a group of white women wanted to build what they called a “monument to the faithful colored mammies” in Washington. These women, members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, pressed lawmakers in Congress to introduce a bill. The Senate passed it, but the bill stalled in the House after fierce opposition from black women, including Mary Church Terrell and Hallie Quinn Brown, members of the National Association of Colored Women.

The fight over a proposed monument to black “mammies” exposes the lie of those who describe Confederate monuments as innocuous celebrations of Southern heritage. Lost Cause memorials are hurtful public symbols of white supremacy. Consider that most Confederate monuments were not erected by grieving widows or relatives immediately after the Civil War. A majority were put up in the 1890s and early 1900s by Southern whites hoping to justify the spread of Jim Crow while erasing the legacy of Reconstruction, a time when African-Americans had gained citizenship and voting rights.

There are now more than 1,740 Confederate monuments, statues, flags, place names and other symbols in public spaces across the country, not counting more than 2,600 markers, battlefields, museums and cemeteries that commemorate the Confederate dead or the many hundreds of statues of staunch segregationists. To date, only about 115 have been removed. In stark contrast, fewer than 100 monuments pay tribute to the civil rights movement.

 

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2 thoughts on “When the Daughters of the Confederacy Wanted a Statue Dedicated to “Loyal Mammies”

  1. Thank you NCNW for standing for what’s right! I am a proud member. Thank you for securing the respect and dignity of all black women and ensuring we were not boxed to just be mammies and slaves. We are of greatness and shall not stand for anything less. God created us to be amazing, beautiful, intelligent, and talented beings without limitations. I greatly appreciate the sharing of this great movement.

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