1875 almanac, other books found in capsule from Robert E. Lee statue
pedestal
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[December 23, 2021]
(Reuters) -An 1875 almanac and other
documents were discovered on Wednesday inside a time capsule that was
encased in the pedestal of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee
that formerly stood in Richmond, Virginia's capital.
Conservators in a laboratory at the state's Department of Historic
Resources opened the lead box after hours of meticulous scraping and
drilling to reveal the almanac, two other unidentified books and a cloth
envelope with unknown contents. A coin was stuck to one of the books.
Historians had thought the box might be a time capsule containing about
60 objects that was placed in the statue pedestal on Oct. 27, 1887,
according to a news release from Virginia Governor Ralph Northam's
office. But Wednesday's discovery seemed to indicate it was a different
capsule.
The memorial to Lee was erected on Monument Avenue in Richmond, the
capital of the pro-slavery Confederacy, a group of breakaway Southern
states that fought against Union forces in the 1861-65 Civil War.
The six-story-tall statue was removed from its base in September after a
year-long legal battle. The monument, which activists say glorified the
South's racist past, had been the focus of protests against racial
injustice. Advocates of keeping Confederate monuments and symbols say
they honor the Southern heritage and the sacrifices made by those who
fought during the war.
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A book which was found in a time capsule recovered from Confederate
General Robert E. Lee's monument is pictured, in Richmond, Virginia,
U.S., December 22, 2021. REUTERS/Jay Paul
Northam, a Democrat, announced plans to remove the statue in June
2020, 10 days after a white Minneapolis policeman killed George
Floyd, who was Black, sparking nationwide protests.
Crews discovered the time capsule on Friday while disassembling the
pedestal that formerly held the statue.
The lead box was found about 20 feet (6 m) above the ground, encased
in a 1,500-pound (680-kg) block of granite, according to the
Department of Historic Resources.
(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Richard Chang and Peter
Cooney)
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