Memphis defies state ban to remove two Confederate statues

BBC News

Memphis has become the latest US city to remove Confederate monuments, taking down two of the statues overnight.

The likenesses of rebel leaders Jefferson Davis and Nathan Bedford Forrest were gone hours after the city sold them to a private group.

Earlier this month, Tennessee state denied the city council’s bid to get rid of the monuments.  

So the council voted unanimously to sell downtown parkland, paving the way for the statues’ removal.

The plot was acquired on Wednesday evening by a non-profit organisation, Memphis Greenspace, for $2,000 (£1,500), the Commercial Appeal newspaper reported.

Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland said in a statement: “History is being made in Memphis now.

“These statues no longer represent who we are as a modern diverse city with momentum.”

He said the monuments would be preserved in an undisclosed location.

The mayor said that Memphis Greenspace had agreed to keep the parks open to the public and maintain them.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans said in a Facebook post about the land sale: “This is a fix, and a scam, and if the state has one hair on its ass then people will be charged with felonies.”

But a local pastor, Earle Fisher, told local news outlet WREG that the monuments were “racist relics”.

“It’s a wonderful thing and it’s something that we should celebrate,” he said of the statues’ removal.

The move comes three months before Memphis marks the 50th anniversary of the assassination there of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

Nathan Bedford Forrest was a secessionist general, slave trader and Ku Klux Klan leader. Jefferson Davis was president of the Confederacy during the American Civil War.

Confederate statues have become lightning rods in recent months for a national debate over race and politics.

A number of the statues have been purged in US cities since a woman died in violent clashes as far-right activists rallied in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-42441875

Jim

6 thoughts on “Memphis defies state ban to remove two Confederate statues

  1. “These statues no longer represent who we are as a modern diverse city with momentum.”

    He’s right.

    TRUE history has no place in Communism.

    “Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland said in a statement: “History is being made in Memphis now.”

    Being MADE?

    Being UNMADE, you POS commie jewb#tch.

    The best history will be made when you & your scumbag commie cohorts are ALL six feet under.

  2. Sell off prime real estate for peanuts & remove 2 statues the state said to leave alone. Do we have laws in this country? For what?
    My experience this week with the county treasurers office was enlightening to put it mildly. She dictated that all vehicles, in my case, a trailer, must have a bill of sale. I says I don’t have one. She says I have to get one. I ask who says? They say the treasurers book. I ask for the statute number. They say there isn’t any. So I say give me my plates then. Then I walked out because they wouldn’t give me my plates. I went home looked it up & found nothing. Called Des Moines, they looked & found nothing. Talked to an ombudsman & she told me the steps to take. Went back to the courthouse & lo & behold! They’re all nice & can’t give me my plates fast enough. ‘Course I’m 6’ 1″, 260 & a bearded biker & I’m pissed. It helps! LOL! I told them the laws are made in Des Moines, not in this Podunk county. Made my day!!

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