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Title: Confederate monuments are the real ‘Lost Cause’
Source: The Herald
URL Source: http://www.heraldonline.com/opinion/article148052619.html
Published: May 6, 2017
Author: Jonathan Capehart
Post Date: 2017-05-06 10:50:09 by Willie Green
Keywords: None
Views: 12865
Comments: 49

Confederate-era war memorials and monuments to the traitors who fought against the Union to uphold slavery have no place on public land. You know, property paid for and maintained by taxpayers. Every day they remain standing is a celebration of racism and an affront to core American values. That’s why I applaud what’s happening in New Orleans right now.

After public hearings, a city council vote and court battles, the Crescent City has finally begun the process of removing four monuments. On Monday, Mayor Mitch Landrieu, D, announced the removal of the Battle of Liberty Place Monument, an obelisk honoring hate. Death threats were made against the contractor. David Duke, that paragon of tolerance, took to Twitter to decry the company “willing to take shekels to tear down priceless New Orleans & American history.” The work is considered so dangerous that the people involved in the removal hid their identities and wore flak jackets while under the protection of police.

“First statue erected to honor members of white supremacist organization who killed New Orleans’ racially integrated police force,” reads the top line of the press release from Landrieu’s office. Landrieu was even more blunt when I talked to him on Wednesday about removing Confederate memorials.

“They were put up during a very narrow point of time, four years of our formal 300-year history, as though they reflect the whole history of the city of New Orleans,” Landrieu told me. “In effect, they were put up by people, the same group of people called the ‘Cult of the Lost Cause.’ And the Lost Cause was the cause of the white supremacy in the South. Those monuments don’t reflect who we ever have been.”

Private funds were used to pay for the monument removals. And Landrieu is keeping the list of donors anonymous. His decision is understandable. "It has been a challenge to make sure that we're able to make sure that the people that are engaged in this are safe and that our police officers are safe as well," he said.

The three other monuments slated for removal are the Robert E. Lee statue at Lee Circle; the Jefferson Davis statue on Jefferson Davis Parkway; and the General Beauregard equestrian statue at the entrance to City Park.

“As a matter of who was Robert E Lee, he never stepped foot in the city of New Orleans,” Landrieu said, pointing out that Union soldiers actually camped at Lee Circle. “This monument was not put up to represent, to revere Robert E Lee, it was put there to represent the cause that he fought for, which in our opinion, was not what New Orleans has ever represented.”

Noting that the Lee statue is “on the most prominent space” in his city, Landrieu put the monument’s location into perspective. “It would be like putting King George where the Washington Memorial is or Robert E. Lee where Lincoln is,” he said with a chuckle. “That’s what was done in the city of New Orleans, and that’s just wrong. It’s not an appropriate historical reflection of where the people of New Orleans have ever been.”

Landrieu says these monuments need to be put in their “proper context.” But he hasn’t focused yet on what that might look like because of the work to remove them in the first place. “If there are some smart people around the country that revere these monuments, if they want to come forward with a plan and the money and the strategy to do that, we’ll be more than happy to talk,” Landrieu offered. He mentioned Washington and Lee University and the Jefferson Davis Society in Mississippi as possible homes for the discarded memorials. “They could put them in context. That’s different from telling the people of the city of New Orleans that they have to keep them on property owned by the people of the city of New Orleans. The people of the city of New Orleans have spoken. And now, we have a right to do with our property the way we want.”

To play devil’s advocate, I asked the Crescent City mayor what he would say to those protesters who argue that these monuments are part of their heritage. Landrieu got to the heart of the matter. “You can’t change history. Taking down a monument doesn’t change history,” he said. “Here is the truth: The Confederacy was on the wrong side of history. Denying humanity to our fellow American citizens, engaging in a Civil War that killed 600,000 people. We ought to be able to look back on that . . . and say, ‘You know what, the Confederacy was wrong.’ And our cities ought to reflect the values of the places that [those monuments are] in.”

New Orleans is still rebuilding after being almost completely destroyed “when the levees broke” during Hurricane Katrina in 2005. “We’re building the city back. We’re not building it back the way it was. We’re building it back the way it should have been if we’d gotten it right the first time,” the city’s 61st mayor told me. And then Landrieu compellingly connected the memorial removals to the overarching effort to rebuild the city.

“As a matter of growth . . . the city of New Orleans is small for a reason, and Atlanta and Houston are big for a reason,” he explained. “Demographic trends in the country and in the world show that people are moving back to inclusive cities. They want culture. They want diversity. They want richness. So the future of New Orleans depends on us being open, not closed. And being welcoming, not exclusive.”

“Those monuments are exclusionary, they’re not inclusionary. They’re not reflective of everybody,” he said, arguing that those memorials tell “a very, very different story” to children about their future in New Orleans. And his concern for the harm those monuments cause goes well beyond the hit to youthful self-esteem. “The attitude that maintains them is the same attitude that’s gonna cause New Orleans to die.”

That won’t happen as long Landrieu and the people of New Orleans stare down the likes of Duke and others who have taken up permanent mental residence in the 19th century.


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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 12.

#3. To: Willie Green (#0)

Confederate monuments are the real ‘Lost Cause’

True,they are going to be replaced with statues of Trayvon Dindonuffin,Bathouse Barry,Jesse Jackson,Al Sharpton,De Rev-Rund Wright,and Snoop Dog.

sneakypete  posted on  2017-05-06   11:38:42 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: sneakypete, Willie Green (#3) (Edited)

True,they are going to be replaced with statues of Trayvon Dindonuffin,Bathouse Barry,Jesse Jackson,Al Sharpton,De Rev-Rund Wright,and Snoop Dog.

I'd prefer we just don't replace them at all.

Nearly all of these public monuments are ghastly. They're crappy little tourist traps and places to drag schoolchildren for field trips.

If it was left to me, I'd probably keep the Iwo Jima memorial, the public-funded WW II memorial, the Washington monument and a handful of others (but not the Lincoln memorial). The rest I'd slate for destruction as a blight on property values. And I'd move the graves at Arlington and return the land to its rightful owners, the Lee family.

These monuments are hideously ugly and are designed to inculcate submissiveness and statism in the general population. That is their true purpose.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-05-06   11:51:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Tooconservative (#6)

Nearly all of these public monuments are ghastly. They're crappy little tourist traps and places to drag schoolchildren for field trips.

Yeah,no need to bother little minds with the sacrifices of their ancestors,and the fact that they thought freedom was something worth fighting for,right?

If it was left to me, I'd probably keep the Iwo Jima memorial, the public-funded WW II memorial, the Washington monument and a handful of others (but not the Lincoln memorial). The rest I'd slate for destruction as a blight on property values.

Have you lost your mind? They have INCREASED property values. Haven't you heard? All those "Crappy little tourists and their children" enjoy visiting them,and like every other tourist attraction they increase the values of the property near them,

And I'd move the graves at Arlington and return the land to its rightful owners, the Lee family.

That's just bizarre. What sort of brain fart did it take to come up with that?

sneakypete  posted on  2017-05-06   13:18:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: sneakypete (#10)

Yeah,no need to bother little minds with the sacrifices of their ancestors,and the fact that they thought freedom was something worth fighting for,right?

I have yet to meet a person who served who claimed it was for the freedom of their distant descendants. This is a propaganda line, mostly promoted by Hollyweird and political scumbags. In real life, such sentiments simply do not exist. They're entirely mythical. People fight for the country for many reasons but this is not one of them.

Have you lost your mind? They have INCREASED property values. Haven't you heard? All those "Crappy little tourists and their children" enjoy visiting them,and like every other tourist attraction they increase the values of the property near them,

The increase in property values is because we have violated the premise of the District's original purpose, namely that of a legislative and executive center for a small federal government. Land values in the District have risen as it became the seat of a vastly oversized and unconstitutional seat of government, the home of a world empire.

That's just bizarre. What sort of brain fart did it take to come up with that?

The land was stolen from the Lee family and, by refusing the tax payment on it, they seized it. Later attempts at making a settlement with a descendant does not alter the fact that Arlington is a stolen property and always has been.

We bury our soldiers on stolen land, mostly so their bodies can be used to form a part of our national tourist trap in the District.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-05-06   14:29:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Tooconservative (#11)

The land was stolen from the Lee family and, by refusing the tax payment on it, they seized it. Later attempts at making a settlement with a descendant does not alter the fact that Arlington is a stolen property and always has been.

Yes and no. It was no longer stolen property after the Lee family sold it to the Federal government.

The original burial of soldiers on the stolen land was to make the land uninhabitable for the rightful owners.

- - - - - - - - - -

The most hallowed land in America is the former Custis-Lee estate, the ancestral home of Martha Dandridge Custis Lee and Robert E. Lee, where the former Custis-Lee mansion remains as a national monument under the National Park Service. The estate was purchased from the Custis-Lee family descendants in 1883.

Robert E. Lee showed allegiance to his State of Virginia. Most military members would not take offense to being compared to Lee.

As for the history of how the property was wrongfully acquired by the government, lost by the government in court, and reacquired through the gracious sale by the Lee ancestors, I am happy to tell it.

THE CUSTIS ESTATE AND THE SUPREME COURT

Martha Dandridge was born on June 2, 1731 on a plantation near Williamsburg. At eighteen, Martha married Daniel Parke Custis, the wealthy owner of the 17,000 acre Custis plantation. Daniel died in 1757 when Martha was twenty-six. Their son, John Parke Custis, was three years old.

Sometime later, Martha met a young colonel in the Virginia Militia. His name was George Washington.

Martha married George on January 6, 1759. The marriage changed George from an ordinary planter to a wealthy landowner. George, Martha, John Parke (4), and younger sister Patsy (2) moved into Mt. Vernon.

George Washington died on December 14, 1799.

On May 22, 1802, Martha Dandridge Custis Washington died. She was laid to rest next to her husband at Mt. Vernon.

THE CUSTIS ESTATE

George Washington Parke Custis was a colonel in the United States Army. Born at Mount Airy, Maryland, on April 30, 1781, his parents were John Parke Custis and Eleanor (Calvert) Custis.

After his father died, young G.W.P. Custis was raised by his grandmother Martha and her second husband, George Washington at Mount Vernon. The Custis mansion, intended as a living memorial to George Washington, was owned and constructed by the first president's adopted grandson, G.W.P. Custis, son of John Parke Custis who himself was a child of Martha Washington by her first marriage and a ward of George Washington. His house, begun in 1802 but not completed until 1817, held a collection of Washington heirlooms.

George Washington Parke Custis considered calling the estate Mount Washington, but eventually adopted the name of the Custis family ancestral estate.

The mansion was built on an 1,100-acre estate that Custis' father, John Parke Custis, purchased in 1778. It was designed by George Hadfield, a young English architect who was for a time in charge of the construction of the Capitol. The north and south wings were completed between 1802 and 1804. The large center section and the portico, presenting an imposing front 43 meters (140 feet) long, were finished 13 years later.

In 1804, G.W.P. Custis married Mary Lee Fitzhugh. Their only child to survive infancy was Mary Anna Randolph Custis, born in 1808.

George Washington Parke Custis died on October 19, 1857. His wife, Mary Fitzhugh Custis, died on April 23, 1853. They were buried in a private lot on the estate.

On June 30, 1831, Mary Anna Randolph Custis married her husband Robert, son of a former three-time governor. For 30 years this mansion was their home, and six of their seven children were born there.

G.W.P. Custis left the estate to his daughter Mary for her lifetime, to be passed on to the her eldest son. The estate was in need of repair and Mary's husband Robert, as executor, oversaw the improvements.

THE CUSTIS ESTATE AND THE CIVIL WAR

Virginia adopted an Ordinance of Secession on April 17, 1861. On April 22, 1861, Robert left his beloved home, never to return. About a month later, Mary also left, managing to send some of the family valuables off to safety. Later, many of the remaining family possessions were moved to the Patent Office for safekeeping. Some items, however, including a few of the Mount Vernon heirlooms, had already been looted and scattered.

"It is better to make up our minds to a general loss. They cannot take away the remembrance of the spot, and the memories of those that to us rendered it sacred. That will remain to us as long as life will last, and that we can preserve," wrote Robert in a letter to Mary.

THE CUSTIS ESTATE WRONGFULLY SEIZED

In 1863 Congress levied a tax on all confiscated properties, but payment was rejected for the Custis estate.

A wartime law required that owners of property in areas occupied by Federal troops appear in person to pay their taxes.

The property was confiscated by the federal government when property taxes levied against the estate were not paid in person by the owner, which was Mary. The property was offered for public sale on January 11, 1864, and was purchased by a tax commissioner for "government use, for war, military, charitable and educational purposes."

Brig. Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs, who commanded a wartime garrison at the estate, appropriated the grounds June 15, 1864. Intending to render the house uninhabitable should the family ever attempt to return, Gen. Meigs ordered union dead to be buried as close to the home as possible. A stone and masonry burial vault in the rose garden, 20 feet wide and 10 feet deep, and containing the remains of 1,800 Bull Run casualties, was among the first monuments to Union dead erected under Meigs' orders. Meigs himself was later buried within 100 yards of the house with his wife, father and son.

Neither Mary, as title holder, nor Robert as executor, ever attempted to publicly recover control of the estate.

After the death of his parents, George Washington Custis brought an action for ejectment in the Circuit Court of Alexandria County, Va. As the eldest son, he claimed that the land had been illegally confiscated and that, according to his grandfather's will, he was the legal owner. In December 1882, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision, returned the property, stating that it had been confiscated without due process

On March 3, 1883, the Congress purchased the property for $150,000, and it became a military reservation.

AND NOW, THE REST OF THE STORY...

Today the mansion, conceived as a living memorial to George Washington, looks somewhat out of place. The effort begun by General Meigs continued and the mansion is now surrounded by hundreds of thousands of graves.

Originally envisioned as Mount Washington, the estate came to be named after the ancestral Custis estate, Arlington.

George Washington's descendant, Mary Anna Randolph Custis married her husband Robert Edward Lee.

The estate was unlawfully confiscated from the lawful owner, the wife of Robert E. Lee.

Ownership was returned to the Custis family by a decision of the U.S. Supreme Court rendered on December 4, 1882. U.S. v. Lee, 106 U.S. 196 (1882)

On March 3, 1883, the Congress purchased the property from George Washington Custis Lee for $150,000.

On March 4, 1925, restoration of the Mansion was authorized. On August 10, 1933, it was transferred from the War Department to the National Park Service. On June 29, 1955, it was declared a permanent memorial to Robert E. Lee, with a name change to "Custis-Lee Mansion."

On June 30, 1972, the mansion was restored to its historic name, Arlington House.

It is the former estate of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Lee that became Arlington National Cemetery. Arlington House was their home.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

EPILOGUE

Augusta Academy was founded in 1749. In 1776, the name was changed to Liberty Hall. Four years later the school was moved to the vicinity of Lexington, where in 1782 it was chartered as Liberty Hall Academy by the Virginia legislature and empowered to grant degrees.

In 1796, George Washington saved the struggling Liberty Hall Academy when he gave the school its first major endowment- $20,000 worth of stock. The trustees promptly changed the name of the school to Washington Academy as an expression of their gratitude.

General Robert E. Lee accepted the position of president of the college in 1865. During his brief presidency, Lee established the School of Law. He also inaugurated courses in journalism, which developed by 1925 into The School of Journalism - now the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications. These courses in business and journalism were the first offered in colleges in the United States.

General Robert E. Lee died on October 12, 1870 and was buried on the university campus.

After Lee's death in 1870, the trustees voted to change the name to Washington and Lee University.

Mary Anna Randolph Custis Lee died on November 5, 1873 at the age of 66. She is buried next to her husband on the Washington & Lee campus in Lexington, Virginia.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

nolu chan  posted on  2017-05-06   15:35:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 12.

#15. To: nolu chan, sneakypete (#12)

Nice summary but you went far beyond my knowledge of the theft of the Lee-Custis estate.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-05-06 17:59:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 12.

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