Kentucky town welcomes Confederate
memorial moved from Louisville
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[May 30, 2017]
By Bryan Woolston
BRANDENBURG, Kentucky (Reuters) - A small
Kentucky town gave a formal welcome on Monday to a monument to the
Confederate soldiers of the American Civil War, rededicating the
controversial structure after the University of Louisville removed it as
an unwelcome symbol of slavery.
About 400 people, some dressed in grey replica uniforms and many holding
small Confederate battle flags, gathered for the Memorial Day ceremony
on a bluff above the Ohio River in Brandenburg, about 40 miles (64 km)
southwest of Louisville.
The town embraced the tower at a time when Confederate symbols are being
removed across the South as reminders of a legacy of slavery and the
racism that underpinned it.
“The way I look at it, it’s part of our history," Brandenburg Mayor
Ronnie Joyner said at the dedication, which included the firing of a
Civil War-era cannon. "We need to preserve our history."
Brandenburg says the riverfront park where it holds a biennial Civil War
reenactment was an appropriate setting for what some see as a respectful
homage to Kentucky's fallen.
The monument's new home is near the spot where a Confederate general in
1863 launched a raid on neighboring Indiana, and Brandenburg hopes the
addition will bring more tourists to the town.
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"The Civil War is not a popular part of people’s past, but you can’t
wipe it out," said Charles Harper of Louisville, who came to the
dedication dressed in Confederate uniform. "Just because you wiped out a
reference to the Civil War doesn’t mean you’ve wiped out slavery,
doesn’t mean you wipe out racism."
The 70-foot-tall concrete plinth features an oversized statue of a rebel
soldier at its crown, representing one of thousands of Kentuckians who
fought with breakaway Southern states in the bloodiest conflict in U.S.
history.
Monday's ceremony, watched by a crowd that was almost exclusively white,
marked the end to a year-long saga that began in April 2016 when the
University of Louisville announced it would dismantle the monument,
erected in 1895.
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A statue of a Confederate soldier stands high above the crowd during
a dedication ceremony in Brandenburg, Kentucky, U.S. May 29, 2017
for a Civil War Confederate Soldier Memorial recently removed from
the campus of the University of Louisville. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston
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Students and faculty had long criticized the memorial as a tacit
tribute to Confederate cause during the 1861-65 conflict, fought
primarily over the issue of slavery.
Last May, a state judge ruled against some Louisville residents and
descendants of Confederate soldiers who sued to keep the monument
from being moved.
Kentucky was neutral during the Civil War and never joined the
Confederacy. But slavery was legal in the commonwealth and many
Kentuckians sympathized with the rebel cause and fought on its side.
The drive to remove Confederate statues in the South and elsewhere
accelerated after the 2015 murder of nine African-Americans by an
avowed white supremacist at an historic South Carolina church. The
murders stirred national soul-searching about racism and its
symbols.
Soon after the killings, the Confederate battle flag was removed
from the grounds of the South Carolina state capitol.
Last week New Orleans dismantled the last of four Confederate
statues that stood in the city for decades. The mayor of Baltimore
said on Monday that her city was considering following the lead of
New Orleans by removing its monuments.
(Additional reporting and writing by Frank McGurty; Editing by
Andrew Hay)
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