The statue of a Confederate
soldier in front of the Chatham County Courthouse and within a traffic circle
surrounding the old courthouse has been removed. During my four years of
college, I drove around that courthouse and passed that statue each time I went
home or returned to campus. In all those times passing the statue, I never gave
it much thought; it was just background scenery.
The statue was removed Nov.
19 after the Chatham County Board of Commissioners chose to remove it. This
removal follows actions in other towns and states to remove Confederate
monuments from public land. Some statues, including the “Silent Sam” statue on
the University of North Carolina campus and a statue at the Durham County
Courthouse, were brought down by protesters who took the law into their own
hands.
Confederate statues, mainly
installed in the first quarter of the 20th century to honor local
residents who had fought on the Confederate side in the Civil War, are ubiquitous
across the South and, therefore, little noticed. The statue at Chapel Hill was
a memorial to the UNC students who postponed their studies to fight in the war.
Many of the memorials across the South were paid for or advocated by United
Daughters of the Confederacy chapters.
Many African-Americans have objected
to the statues and other reminders of the Civil War, including the display of Confederate
battle flags. Other protesters against memorials to Confederates, including
left-wing “anti-fascists” and veterans of other demonstrations for liberal
causes, joined the original protesters. Controversies like this have brought
out angry counter-protesters who see the toppling of monuments as a way to
erase history.
Emotions are strong. The
Chatham County commissioners’ meeting about that county’s statue was called
“rowdy” as residents on both sides of the issue loudly made their views known.
Some arrests were made in Chatham County and during the Silent Sam protests in
Chapel Hill.
Estimates are that there are
more than 1,000 Confederate statues or memorials across the South, and about
the same number of memorials to Union soldiers in the North, reminders of the
deadliest war in American history.
You can mark me as
ambivalent about Confederate statues. I have never felt inspired by one,
although two of my great-great-grandfathers died in the Civil War while wearing
Rebel gray (one in battle, one from disease). I don’t think of my ancestors
when I see a Confederate statue, nor do I find the statues to be an endorsement
of slavery.
The overwhelming proportion
of Confederate soldiers (including my dirt-poor great-great-grandfathers) had
no interest in slavery or the slave economy. They fought for what they saw as
their patriotic duty, defending their homes and their sovereign state from what
they saw as an invading army. These boys in gray were in many ways victims of
the war that was thrust upon them by wealthy, slave-owning aristocrats. As N.C.
Gov. Zebulon Vance said, “It’s a rich man’s war and a poor man’s fight.”
What disturbs me most about
the toppling of Civil War monuments (from South or North) is the fact that they
are memorials to a generation who died doing their duty as they saw it. The
memorials were an effort to assuage the grief of losing a father, brother, son
or neighbor in that awful war. Every family in the South lost someone. I find
it particularly sad that today’s UNC students cannot see the sacrifice that
students and their families made, rightly or wrongly, 160 years ago.
Today’s partisans of the
Confederate memorials issue might want to take a look at some photos from the
50th anniversary of the 1863 battle of Gettysburg. The photos from
the 1913 reunion show aged Union and Confederate soldiers sharing food, smiles,
seats and mementos with a camaraderie that would shock today’s protesters.
They celebrated their sacrifices and achievements together and gave honor and
respect to those on the other side. Fifty years before, they had been intent on
killing each other.
Today’s Americans, unlike
the frail former combatants of 1913, seem determined to refight the past.
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