Commemorating North Carolinas anti-Confederate heritage, too
If your family has been in North Carolina since the Civil War like mine has, your ancestors might well have detested the Confederacy. If you added up the African-Americans, the Unionists, the anti-Confederate rebels, the anti-war crowd and those who simply hated what the Confederacy did to their home state, they might have outnumbered the hardcore Confederates. The sizable crew of dissidents was just as Southern as Robert E. Lee and might be astonished to see Confederate monuments all over the state today.
In arguing for the new Mandatory Confederate Monuments Act, Republican Rep. Marilyn Avila of Raleigh said, When you talk about memorials and remembrances, the point of time at which they were erected is extremely relevant. Avila was right. She simply had no idea when the monuments went up, saying it was shortly after the War Between the States. If someone had tried to put up Confederate monuments all over North Carolina shortly after the Civil War, there might have been another war. The unanimous Confederate white South is nothing but a cherished myth especially in North Carolina.
White North Carolinians erected the vast majority of our Confederate monuments 82 out of 98 after 1898, decades after the Civil War ended. More importantly, they built the monuments after the white supremacy campaigns had seized power by force and taken the vote from black North Carolinians. The monuments reflected that moment of white supremacist ascendency as much as they did the Confederate legacy.
Take the Confederate monument on the campus of UNC-Chapel Hill, better known as Silent Sam. The speaker at its dedication in 1913, industrialist Julian S. Carr, bragged that he had horse-whipped a negro wench until her skirts hung in shreds, because
she had publicly insulted
a Southern lady. Carrs speech heralded the Anglo-Saxon race in the South reunited with white supremacy as the glue.
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