Current:Home > FinanceMississippi mayor says a Confederate monument is staying in storage during a lawsuit -Wealthify
Mississippi mayor says a Confederate monument is staying in storage during a lawsuit
View
Date:2025-04-13 07:31:39
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A Confederate monument that was removed from a courthouse square in Mississippi will remain in storage rather than being put up at a new site while a lawsuit over its future is considered, a city official said Friday.
“It’s stored in a safe location,” Grenada Mayor Charles Latham told The Associated Press, without disclosing the site.
James L. Jones, who is chaplain for a Sons of Confederate Veterans chapter, and Susan M. Kirk, a longtime Grenada resident, sued the city Wednesday — a week after a work crew dismantled the stone monument, loaded it onto a flatbed truck and drove it from the place it had stood since 1910.
The Grenada City Council voted to move the monument in 2020, weeks after police killed George Floyd in Minneapolis and after Mississippi legislators retired the last state flag in the U.S. that prominently featured the Confederate battle emblem.
The monument has been shrouded in tarps the past four years as officials sought the required state permission for a relocation and discussed how to fund the change.
The city’s proposed new site, announced days before the monument was dismantled, is behind a fire station about 3.5 miles (5.6 kilometers) from the square.
The lawsuit says the monument belongs on Grenada’s courthouse square, which “has significant historical and cultural value.”
The 20-foot (6.1-meter) monument features a Confederate solider. The base is carved with images of Confederate president Jefferson Davis and a Confederate battle flag. It is engraved with praise for “the noble men who marched neath the flag of the Stars and Bars” and “the noble women of the South,” who “gave their loved ones to our country to conquer or to die for truth and right.”
Latham, who was elected in May along with some new city council members, said the monument has been a divisive feature in the town of 12,300, where about 57% of residents are Black and 40% are white.
Some local residents say the monument should go into a Confederate cemetery in Grenada.
The lawsuit includes a letter from Mississippi Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney, a Republican who was a state senator in 2004 and co-authored a law restricting changes to war monuments.
“The intent of the bill is to honor the sacrifices of those who lost or risked their lives for democracy,” Chaney wrote Tuesday. “If it is necessary to relocate the monument, the intent of the law is that it be relocated to a suitable location, one that is fitting and equivalent, appropriate and respectful.”
The South has hundreds of Confederate monuments. Most were dedicated during the early 20th century, when groups such as the United Daughters of the Confederacy sought to shape the historical narrative by valorizing the Lost Cause mythology of the Civil War.
veryGood! (938)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- ‘Access Hollywood’ tape of Trump won’t be shown to jury at defamation trial, lawyer says
- 'Wait Wait' for January 20, 2024: With Not My Job guest David Oyelowo
- Todd Helton on the cusp of the Baseball Hall of Fame with mile-high ceiling broken
- Average rate on 30
- 911 calls from Maui capture pleas for the stranded, the missing and those caught in the fire’s chaos
- Readers' wishes for 2024: TLC for Earth, an end to AIDS, more empathy, less light
- Small-town Colorado newspapers stolen after running story about rape charges at police chief’s house
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Caffeine in Panera's Charged Lemonade blamed for 'permanent' heart problems in third lawsuit
Ranking
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- The Fate of Kaley Cuoco’s The Flight Attendant Season 3 Revealed
- Roxanna Asgarian’s ‘We Were Once a Family’ and Amanda Peters’ ‘The Berry Pickers’ win library medals
- Islanders fire coach Lane Lambert, replace him with Patrick Roy
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- JetBlue and Spirit Airlines say they will appeal a judge’s ruling that blocked their merger
- Ex-Florida GOP party chair cleared in sexual assault probe, but could still face voyeurism charges
- Indignant Donald Trump pouts and rips civil fraud lawsuit in newly released deposition video
Recommendation
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
Alabama five-star freshman quarterback Julian Sayin enters transfer portal
S&P 500 notches first record high in two years in tech-driven run
Indignant Donald Trump pouts and rips civil fraud lawsuit in newly released deposition video
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
2 artworks returned to heirs of Holocaust victim. Another is tied up in court
A British politician calling for a cease-fire in Gaza gets heckled by pro-Palestinian protesters
Iran launches satellite that is part of a Western-criticized program as regional tensions spike