The South’s monuments will rise again
On June 21, after 125 years of standing at attention, the bronze soldier on top of the North Carolina State Confederate Monument was finally laid to rest on the bed of a flatbed truck. Gov. Roy Cooper (D) had ordered the monument removed from the Capitol grounds after the death of George Floyd. As the soldier came down in Raleigh, spectators cheered, took photos and sang “We Shall Overcome.” But I wondered where that truck was headed. After all, under North Carolina’s 2015 Historic Artifact Management and Patriotism Act, any removed monuments must be placed somewhere as prominent as their original location. Thus, the soldier so gently removed from his perch in 2020 will likely be boosted back up on it again one day soon.
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