The building of Confederate statues surged again in the 1950s and 1960s, during the civil rights movement, Grossman says. Although blacks were making strides toward equality, there was still resistance to change in the South.
Today, many find the monuments offensive. Zyahna Bryant, an African- American 11th-grader in Charlottesville, feels the history of slavery shouldn’t be celebrated. The city’s Lee statue stirs up feelings of hurt and fear for Bryant, who petitioned the city to take down the monument.
“I am offended every time I pass it,” Bryant wrote to city officials. “I am reminded over and over again of the pain of my ancestors.”
But many of those who support keeping the monuments say their motives are about honor, not race. “When you start removing the history of the city,” says Robert Bonner, a Civil War re-enactor from New Orleans, “you start losing where you came from and where you’ve been.”
Several states, including Georgia, Maryland, and North Carolina, have passed laws banning the removal of any plaque, statue, or monument on public property commemorating a historic military figure or event. Lawmakers in Alabama, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Texas are considering similar legislation.
But not all officials agree.
Charlottesville’s vice mayor, Wes Bellamy, says of the Lee statue: “We believe that it’s not a statue or memorial that should be in the city of Charlottesville. Certainly not in a public place, where people who are paying taxes are deeply offended by these statues and memorials.”
At least 60 Confederate monuments in the U.S. have been removed or renamed in the past two years, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Nearly 700 remain, spread across 31 states, from California to Delaware.
Many other Confederate tributes exist across the U.S., including schools, streets, and mountains honoring figures like Lee, General Stonewall Jackson, and Confederate President Jefferson Davis. In August, the U.S. Army declined a request from a black congresswoman to rename streets honoring Lee and Jackson at Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn, New York. An Army official called any effort to change the names “controversial and divisive.”