These North Carolina heroes should replace Confederate monuments
We have a glorious capitol. Modest and elegant, the 1839 building is considered a neo-classical gem. Surrounding it is a verdant square of neat pavilions. But for now, the area is scarred by Confederate monuments. Those statues will come down eventually. Here is who belongs in their place:
1.) George Henry White A successful lawyer and businessman, the African-American from New Bern was the last black Congressman between Southern Redemption and the 1940s. White supremacists hounded him from office in 1901. In his departing speech, White predicted that African-Americans would rise like a phoenix from their political disenfranchisementa prophecy fulfilled by President Obama. His comments leaving North Carolina were darker: I cannot live in North Carolina like a man and be treated like a man. Lets do him justice.
2.) Daniel Russell The corpulent Wilmington farmer served as governor from 1897-1901. Governor Russell led the short-lived Fusionist movement of white Populists and the biracial Republican Party. A white Republican, Russell distinguished himself by fighting for African-American rights during the infamous Wilmington Coup of 1898, barely escaping with his life. Although his political movement was cut short, Russells courage was vindicated by history.
3.) Harriet Ann Jacobs Jacobs shocked the consciences of northern women with her autobiographical novel, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. The bracing text describes her struggles with sexual abuse by masters and the grueling difficulties of maintaining an enslaved womans dignity. Her social and artistic accomplishment is all the more profound because the words came directly from a female escaped slave, at a time when most African-Americans were kept illiterate by force of law. Her novel is a monument in itself; her life deserves physical commemoration.
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