Baltimore removes four Confederate
statues after Virginia rally
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[August 17, 2017]
By Gina Cherelus
(Reuters) - Baltimore removed four
monuments to the pro-slavery Civil War Confederacy before dawn on
Wednesday, working quickly so the city could avoid protests like the one
organized by white nationalists that turned deadly in Charlottesville,
Virginia.
The statues, including one of General Robert E. Lee and another of
General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, were taken off their bases in Wyman
Park Dell, beside the Baltimore Museum of Art, and carried away on a
flatbed truck.
Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh said she and the city council decided to
remove the monuments "quickly and quietly."
"I think any city that has Confederate statues (is) concerned about
violence occurring," she told reporters.
City Councilman Brandon Scott had called for immediate action following
the "domestic terrorism" carried out on Saturday by white supremacists
in Charlottesville.
A 32-year-old woman was killed and 19 people were injured in the
Virginia college town when an Ohio man crashed a car into anti-racist
protesters.
Following the violence, calls increased for removal of Confederate
memorials, flags and other symbols from public places around the United
States.
Maryland was a slaveholding state during the Civil War.
In Los Angeles on Wednesday, the United Daughters of the Confederacy
asked the Hollywood Forever Cemetery to remove a monument that since
1925 honored Confederate veterans. Cemetery spokesman Theodore Hovey
said the organization made the request after hundreds of people demanded
it be taken away.
"I think the owner's main concern was for the monument's well-being in
light of the current atmosphere, and we were concerned about maintaining
the tranquility and peace of the cemetery," Hovey said, adding that the
United Daughters would find a new location for the statue.
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Workers remove the monuments to Robert E. Lee, commander of the
pro-slavery Confederate army in the American Civil War, and Thomas
"Stonewall" Jackson, a Confederate general, from Wyman Park in
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. August 16, 2017. Courtesy of Alec
MacGillis/ProPublica via REUTERS .
In Birmingham, Alabama's largest city, Mayor William Bell ordered
workers on Tuesday to obscure a Confederate monument in a city park
using wooden boards. The state attorney general, Steve Marshall,
sued the city in response, saying the barriers broke a state law
passed in May that banned local governments from moving or altering
historical monuments that have been on public property for more than
40 years.
The mayor said the city will fight the lawsuit and ultimately try to
get the monument removed from the park.
"When you really look at what the Confederacy and the monuments
really represent, they represent acts of sedition against the United
State of America," Bell said in a telephone interview.
In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo wrote to the U.S. Army urging it
to remove the names of Jackson and Lee from streets on Fort Hamilton
Army Base in Brooklyn.
Cuomo said the Charlottesville violence and the tactics of white
supremacists "are a poison in our national discourse, and every
effort must be made to combat them."
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Twitter that, following
the violence in Charlottesville, the city will conduct a 90-day
review "of all symbols of hate" that may be on its property.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee, and Gina Cherelus,
Jonathan Allen and Peter Szekely in New York; Editing by David
Gregorio, Toni Reinhold)
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