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Confederate monuments and memorials

Confederate monuments and memorials in the United States include public displays and symbols of the Confederate States of America (CSA), Confederate leaders, or Confederate soldiers of the American Civil War. Many monuments and memorials have been or will be removed under great controversy. Part of the commemoration of the American Civil War, these symbols include monuments and statues, flags, holidays and other observances, and the names of schools, roads, parks, bridges, buildings, counties, cities, lakes, dams, military bases, and other public structures.[a] In a December 2018 special report, Smithsonian Magazine stated, "over the past ten years, taxpayers have directed at least $40 million to Confederate monuments—statues, homes, parks, museums, libraries, and cemeteries—and to Confederate heritage organizations."[2]

This entry does not include commemorations of pre-Civil War figures connected with the origins of the Civil War or white supremacy but not directly tied to the Confederacy, such as Supreme Court Justice Roger B. Taney, pro-slavery congressman Preston Brooks, North Carolina Chief Justice Thomas Ruffin,[3] or Southern politician John C. Calhoun, although Calhoun was venerated by the Confederacy and post-war segregationists, and monuments to Calhoun "have been the most consistent targets" of vandals.[4] It also does not include post-Civil War white supremacists, such as North Carolina Governor Charles Aycock and Mississippi Governor James K. Vardaman.

Monuments and memorials are listed alphabetically by state, and by city within each state. States not listed have no known qualifying items for the list.[5]

History edit

Monument building and dedications edit

Memorials have been erected on public spaces (including on courthouse grounds) either at public expense or funded by private organizations and donors. Numerous private memorials have also been erected.

 
Chart of public symbols of the Confederacy and its leaders as surveyed by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), by year of establishment. Most of these were put up either during the Jim Crow era or during the Civil Rights Movement.[b] These two periods also coincided with the 50th and 100th anniversaries of the Civil War.[c][6]

According to Smithsonian Magazine, "Confederate monuments aren't just heirlooms, the artifacts of a bygone era. Instead, American taxpayers are still heavily investing in these tributes today."[2] The report also concluded that the monuments were constructed and are regularly maintained in promotion of the Lost Cause, white supremacist mythology, and over the many decades of their establishment, African American leaders regularly protested these memorials and what they represented.[2]

A small number of memorializations were made during the war, mainly as ship and place names. After the war, Robert E. Lee said on several occasions that he was opposed to any monuments, as they would, in his opinion, "keep open the sores of war".[7][8] Nevertheless, monuments and memorials continued to be dedicated shortly after the American Civil War.[9][1] Before 1890, most were erected in cemeteries as memorials to soldiers who died in the war.[10] Many more monuments were dedicated in the years after 1890, when Congress established the first National Military Park at Chickamauga and Chattanooga, and by the turn of the 20th century, five battlefields from the Civil War had been preserved: Chickamauga-Chattanooga, Antietam, Gettysburg, Shiloh, and Vicksburg. At Vicksburg National Military Park, more than 95% of the park's monuments were erected in the first eighteen years after the park was established in 1899.[11] But monuments began appearing in public places with the emergence of the Jim Crow South.[10]

Jim Crow edit

Confederate monument-building has often been part of widespread campaigns to promote and justify Jim Crow laws in the South.[12][1][13] According to the American Historical Association (AHA), the erection of Confederate monuments during the early 20th century was "part and parcel of the initiation of legally mandated segregation and widespread disenfranchisement across the South." According to the AHA, memorials to the Confederacy erected during this period "were intended, in part, to obscure the terrorism required to overthrow Reconstruction, and to intimidate African Americans politically and isolate them from the mainstream of public life." A later wave of monument building coincided with the civil rights movement, and according to the AHA "these symbols of white supremacy are still being invoked for similar purposes."[14] According to Smithsonian Magazine, "far from simply being markers of historic events and people, as proponents argue, these memorials were created and funded by Jim Crow governments to pay homage to a slave-owning society and to serve as blunt assertions of dominance over African-Americans."[2]

 
Confederate Soldier Statue, in Monroe County, West Virginia, 2016

According to historian Jane Dailey from the University of Chicago, in many cases, the purpose of the monuments was not to celebrate the past but rather to promote a "white supremacist future".[15] Another historian, Karen L. Cox, from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, has written that the monuments are "a legacy of the brutally racist Jim Crow era", and that "the whole point of Confederate monuments is to celebrate white supremacy".[13] Another historian from UNC, James Leloudis, stated that "The funders and backers of these monuments are very explicit that they are requiring a political education and a legitimacy for the Jim Crow era and the right of white men to rule."[16] They were erected without the consent or even input of Southern African Americans, who remembered the Civil War far differently, and who had no interest in honoring those who fought to keep them enslaved.[17] According to Civil War historian Judith Giesberg, professor of history at Villanova University, "White supremacy is really what these statues represent."[18] Some monuments were also meant to beautify cities as part of the City Beautiful movement, although this was secondary.[19]

In a June 2018 speech, Civil War historian James I. Robertson Jr. of Virginia Tech said the monuments were not a "Jim Crow signal of defiance" and referred to the current trend to dismantle or destroy them as an "age of idiocy" motivated by "elements hell-bent on tearing apart unity that generations of Americans have painfully constructed."[20] Katrina Dunn Johnson, Curator of the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum, states that "thousands of families throughout the country were unable to reclaim their soldier's remains--many never learned their loved ones' exact fate on the battlefield or within the prison camps. The psychological impact of such a devastating loss cannot be underestimated when attempting to understand the primary motivations behind Southern memorialization."[21]

Many Confederate monuments were dedicated in the former Confederate states and border states in the decades following the Civil War, in many instances by Ladies Memorial Associations, United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), United Confederate Veterans (UCV), Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), the Heritage Preservation Association, and other memorial organizations.[22][23][24] Other Confederate monuments are located on Civil War battlefields. Many Confederate monuments are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, either separately or as contributing objects within listings of courthouses or historic districts. Art historians Cynthia Mills and Pamela Simpson argued, in Monuments to the Lost Cause, that the majority of Confederate monuments, of the type they define, were "commissioned by white women, in hope of preserving a positive vision of antebellum life."[25][26]

In the late nineteenth century, technological innovations in the granite and bronze industries helped reduce costs and made monuments more affordable for small towns. Companies looking to capitalize on this opportunity often sold nearly identical copies of monuments to both the North and South.[27]

Another wave of monument construction coincided with the Civil Rights Movement and the American Civil War Centennial.[1]: 11  At least thirty-two Confederate monuments were dedicated between 2000 and 2017, including at least 7 re-dedications.[28][29][30][31]

Scholarly study edit

Scholarly studies of the monuments began in the 1980s. In 1983 John J. Winberry published a study which was based on data from the work of R.W. Widener.[32][33] He estimated that the main building period for monuments was from 1889 to 1929 and that of the monuments erected in courthouse squares over half were built between 1902 and 1912. He determined four main locations for monuments; battlefields, cemeteries, county courthouse grounds, and state capitol grounds. Over a third of the courthouse monuments were dedicated to the dead. The majority of the cemetery monuments in his study were built in the pre-1900 period, while most of the courthouse monuments were erected after 1900. Of the 666 monuments in his study 55% were of Confederate soldiers, while 28% were obelisks. Soldiers dominated courthouse grounds, while obelisks account for nearly half of cemetery monuments. The idea that the soldier statues always faced north was found to be untrue and that the soldiers usually faced the same direction as the courthouse. He noted that the monuments were "remarkably diverse" with "only a few instances of repetition of inscriptions".[33]

 
The Confederate Memorial in Fulton, Kentucky is listed on the National Register of Historic Places

He categorized the monuments into four types. Type 1 was a Confederate soldier on a column with his weapon at parade rest, or weaponless and gazing into the distance. These accounted for approximately half the monuments studied. They are, however, the most popular among the courthouse monuments. Type 2 was a Confederate soldier on a column with rifle ready, or carrying a flag or bugle. Type 3 was an obelisk, often covered with drapery and bearing cannonballs or an urn. This type was 28% of the monuments studied, but 48% of the monuments in cemeteries and 18% of courthouse monuments. Type 4 was a miscellaneous group, including arches, standing stones, plaques, fountains, etc. These account for 17% of the monuments studied.[33]

Over a third of the courthouse monuments were specifically dedicated to the Confederate dead. The first courthouse monument was erected in Bolivar, Tennessee, in 1867. By 1880 nine courthouse monuments had been erected. Winberry noted two centers of courthouse monuments: the Potomac counties of Virginia, from which the tradition spread to North Carolina, and a larger area covering Georgia, South Carolina and northern Florida. The diffusion of courthouse monuments was aided by organizations such as the United Confederate Veterans and their publications, though other factors may also have been effective.[33]

Winberry listed four reasons for the shift from cemeteries to courthouses. First was the need to preserve the memory of the Confederate dead and also recognize the veterans who returned. Second was to celebrate the rebuilding of the South after the war. Third was the romanticizing of the Lost Cause, and the fourth was to unify the white population in a common heritage against the interests of African-American Southerners. He concluded: "No one of these four possible explanations for the Confederate monument is adequate or complete in itself. The monument is a symbol, but whether it was a memory of the past, a celebration of the present, or a portent of the future remains a difficult question to answer; monuments and symbols can be complicated and sometimes indecipherable."[33]

The Monument Movement edit

The Monument Movement was a national movement of the late 19th and early 20th century. The Union and Confederate monuments were erected as community memorials. In the North and South communities came together in the time of war, contributing their men and boys (and a few documented women), then they came together again to memorialize these soldiers and their contributions to the cause as they saw it. Citizens paid subscriptions to memorials, for monument associations, taxes were issued, the GAR, Allied Orders, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and the United Confederate Veterans all lead fundraisers.[34]

The monument to Confederate Colonel Francis S. Bartow was erected after First Manassas but was destroyed before or during Second Manassas. The other early monuments were Union monuments at Battle of Rowlett's Station in Munfordville, Kentucky in January 1862 for the men of the 32nd Indiana killed. It was removed for its own protection from the elements in 2008.[35] Other early Union monuments before the war ended were the Hazen Brigade Monument in Murfreesboro and the 1865 Ladd and Whitney Monument in Lowell, Massachusetts.[36][37][38]

The Northern memorials recorded in the survey work to date lists 11 monuments erected before 1866 including the previously mentioned monuments. Another ten monuments were documented in 1866, and 11 more in 1867 by the time the first post-war Confederate monuments were erected in Romney, Hampshire County, West Virginia and Chester, Chester County, South Carolina in 1867.[34]

 
Blevins' "Forever in Mourning" Chart of Union and Confederate Monuments, 1860–1920

In addition to monuments to the Union and Confederate honorees, the Monument Movement saw the placement of Revolutionary War Monuments for the 100th of the American Revolution from 1876 to 1883. In the W.H. Mullins Company catalog, The Blue and the Gray, it notes with Union and Confederate Monuments the company's recent installments of monuments for the Revolutionary War at Guilford Courthouse, North Carolina.[39]

Vandalism edit

As of June 19, over 12 Confederate monuments had been vandalized in 2019, usually with paint.[40][41][needs update]

Removal edit

 
The Confederate Monument to Robert E. Lee is removed from its pedestal in Lee Circle in New Orleans on May 17, 2017

As of April 2017, at least 60 symbols of the Confederacy had been removed or renamed since 2015, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).[42] At the same time, laws in various Southern states place restrictions on, or prohibit altogether, the removal of statues and memorials and the renaming of parks, roads, and schools.[43][44][45][46][47]

A 2017 Reuters poll found that 54% of adults stated that the monuments should remain in all public spaces, and 27% said they should be removed, while 19% said they were unsure. The results were split along racial and political lines, with whites and Republicans preferring to keep the monuments in place, while blacks and Democrats were more likely to support their removal.[48][49] A similar 2017 poll by HuffPost/YouGov found that one-third of respondents favored removal, while 49% were opposed.[50][51]

Support for removal increased during the George Floyd protests, with 52% in favor of removal, and 44% opposed.[52][53]

Time period Number of removals[54]
1865–2009 2
2009–2014 3
2015 (after Charleston church shooting) 4
2016 4
2017 (year of the Charlottesville car attack) 36
2018 8
2019 4
2020 (after murder of George Floyd) 94[55]
2021 16[56]

Geographic distribution edit

Confederate monuments are widely distributed across the southern United States.[33] The distribution pattern follows the general political boundaries of the Confederacy.[33] Of the more than 1503 public monuments and memorials to the Confederacy, more than 718 are monuments and statues. Nearly 300 monuments and statues are in Georgia, Virginia, or North Carolina. The northern states that remained part of the Union, and the western states that were largely settled after the Civil War, have few or no memorials to the Confederacy.

National edit

United States Capitol edit

 
There are seven Confederate figures in the National Statuary Hall Collection, in the United States Capitol.

In the National Statuary Hall Collection, housed inside the United States Capitol, each state has provided statues of two citizens that the state wants to honor. Seven Confederate figures are among them, with one pending removal and replacement. The dates listed below reflect when each statue was given to the collection:[57][58]

In addition to these pieces, three additional sculptures of Confederate figures have been removed since the turn of the 21st century.

Arlington National Cemetery edit

 
Confederate Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery
The NPS describes the property as "the nation's memorial to Robert E. Lee. It honors him for specific reasons, including his role in promoting peace and reunion after the Civil War. In a larger sense it exists as a place of study and contemplation of the meaning of some of the most difficult aspects of American History: military service; sacrifice; citizenship; duty; loyalty; slavery and freedom."[72]

Coins and stamps edit

  • Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson were portrayed by the US Mint on the 1925 Commemorative silver US half dollar, along with the words "Stone Mountain". The coin was a fundraiser for the Stone Mountain monument, which honors the Confederate Generals. The authorized issue was 5 million coins, to be sold at $1 each, but that proved overly optimistic and only 1.3 million coins were released, many of which ended up in circulation after being spent for face value.[75] The caption on the reverse reads "Memorial to the valor of the soldier of the South".
  • Robert E. Lee has been commemorated on at least five US postage stamps. One 1936–37 stamp featured Generals Lee and Stonewall Jackson with Lee's home Stratford Hall.[76]

US military edit

Bases edit

Prior to 2023, there were nine major U.S. military bases named in honor of Confederate military leaders, all in former Confederate states.[1] Following nationwide protests over the murder of George Floyd by a police officer, the United States Congress in 2021 created The Naming Commission in order to rename military assets with names associated with the Confederacy.[77] The United States Secretary of Defense was required to implement a plan developed by the commission and to "remove all names, symbols, displays, monuments, and paraphernalia that honor or commemorate the Confederate States of America or any person who served voluntarily with the Confederate States of America from all assets of the Department of Defense" within three years of the commission's creation.[78][79]

By October 2023, all nine bases had officially been redesignated under new names proposed by the commission.

Facilities edit

  • Lee Barracks, named for CSA Gen. Robert E. Lee (1962), at U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York.[90]
  • U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland:
    • Buchanan House, the Naval Academy superintendent's home, named for CSA naval officer Franklin Buchanan.[91] A road near the house is also memorialized in Buchanan's name.
    • Maury Hall, home to the academy's division of Weapons and Systems Engineering, named for US naval officer in charge of the Depot of Charts and Instruments at Washington and later CSA naval officer Matthew Fontaine Maury.[91][92]

Current ships edit

Former ships edit

Several ships named for Confederate leaders fell into Union hands during the Civil War. The Union Navy retained the names of these ships while turning their guns against the Confederacy:

Multi-state highways edit

On October 16, 2018, the Board of Commissioners of Orange County, North Carolina (location of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, see Silent Sam), voted unanimously to repeal the county's 1959 resolution naming for Davis the portion of U.S. 15 running through the county.[94]

Alabama edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 122 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Alabama.[95]

Alaska edit

  • Yukon–Koyukuk Census Area: "Confederate Gulch"[96] and "Union Gulch" both drain the side of a mineralized mountain mass northeast of Wiseman. Gold was discovered in both gulches in the early 20th century, though only Union Gulch was mined.[97]

Arizona edit

As of 20 August 2020, only two Confederate related plaques on public property remain in Phoenix and Sierra Vista, Arizona.[95]

Type of monument Date Location Details Image
Public 2010 Sierra Vista Confederate Memorial, Historical Soldiers Memorial Cemetery area of the state-owned Southern Arizona Veterans' Memorial Cemetery. The monument was erected in to honor the 21 soldiers interred in that cemetery who served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War and later fought in Indian wars in Arizona as members of the U.S. Army.[98][99]
Private 1999 Phoenix Arizona Confederate Veterans Monument, at Greenwood Memory Lawn Cemetery; erected by SCV.[98]  
Public 1961–2020 Phoenix Memorial to Arizona Confederate Troops, in Wesley Bolin Park, next to the Arizona State Capitol; UDC memorial.[98]  
Road 1943–2020 Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway marker 50 mi (80 km) east of Phoenix; erected by UDC. Tarred and feathered in August 2017.[98][100]
Public 1984–2015 Picacho Peak State Park A commemorative sign and a plaque commemorated the Battle of Picacho Pass, the westernmost Confederate engagement of the war. The sign is "dedicated to Capt. Sherod Hunter's 'Arizona Rangers, Arizona Volunteers' C.S.A.", while the plaque states three Union soldiers buried on battlefield and includes both US Union and CSA flags. The sign was removed in 2015 due to deterioration of the wood and the plaque was moved onto the Union stone monument.[98][101][102]  

Arkansas edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 65 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Arkansas.[95]

State capitol edit

Monuments edit

 
Van Buren Confederate Monument at Crawford County Courthouse in Van Buren, Arkansas

Courthouse monuments edit

Other public monuments edit

 
Bentonville Confederate Monument
 
Confederate Statue, Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery
 
Confederate Soldiers Monument, Little Rock National Cemetery
 
Little Rock Confederate Memorial, Little Rock National Cemetery
 
Robert E. Lee Monument in Marianna
 
Star City Confederate Memorial

Inhabited places edit

Parks edit

Roads edit

Schools edit

State symbols edit

 
Flag of Arkansas since 1913
  • Flag of Arkansas The blue star above "ARKANSAS" represents the Confederate States of America and is placed above the three other stars for the countries (Spain, France and the US) to which the State belonged before statehood. The diamond represents the nations only diamond mine with bordering 25 stars symbolizing 25th state to join.[127] The design of the border around the white diamond evokes the saltire found on the Confederate battle flag.[128]

California edit

As of 23 July 2020, there were at least four public spaces with Confederate monuments in California.[95]

Inhabited places edit

Roads edit

Schools edit

  • Anaheim: Savanna High School (1961) mascot has always been Johnny Rebel and a fiberglass statue of a Confederate soldier stood in the courtyard from 1964 until 2009[131] when it was removed due to deterioration. The school colors are red and grey and the school fields the Savanna Mighty Marching Rebel Band and Color Guard.

Mountains and recreation edit

Mine edit

 
Stonewall Jackson Mine, San Diego County, circa 1872
  • San Diego County: Stonewall Jackson Mine (1870–1893), the richest gold mine in southern California history[137]

Colorado edit

 
Robert E. Lee Mine in Leadville. Photo by William Henry Jackson.

Schools edit

  • Keenesburg: Weld Central Senior High School and Weld Central Middle School share the Weld Central Rebel, a Civil-war-era-soldier which used to appear with depictions of Confederate flags. School teams are named Rebels.[138]

Monument edit

Mine edit

Delaware edit

As of June 24, 2020, there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Delaware.[95]

District of Columbia edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least nine public Confederate monuments in Washington, D.C., mostly in the National Statuary Hall Collection. (See above)[95]

  • Albert Pike Memorial (1901):[144] An outdoor statue that is owned by the National Park Service at 3rd and D Streets NW in the Judiciary Square neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Pike was a Confederate General and leading Freemason and is dressed as a Mason in the sculpture.[95][58] The statue is a "portrait of Albert Pike as a Masonic leader and not as a general in the military."[145][146][147] "Eight D.C. elected officials have asked the National Park Service to remove" the statue.[148] On June 19, 2020, protesters tore down the statue and set it on fire as part of the George Floyd protests because of Pike's association with the Confederacy.

Florida edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 63 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Florida.[95]

An August 2017 meeting of the Florida League of Mayors was devoted to the topic of what to do with Civil War monuments.[149]

State capitol edit

State symbol edit

 
Flag of Florida since 1900
  • The current flag of Florida, adopted by popular referendum in 1900, with minor changes in 1985, contains the St. Andrew's Cross. It is believed that the Cross was added in memory of, and showing support for, the Confederacy.[152][153][154] Others instead say there is no link with the Confederacy, but that the saltire recalls the Cross of Burgundy, the emblem of New Spain.[155][156][157] However, the addition of the Cross was proposed by Governor Francis P. Fleming, a former Confederate soldier, who was strongly committed to racial segregation.

State holiday edit

  • In Florida, Robert E. Lee's birthday (January 19), Confederate Memorial Day (April 26), and Jefferson Davis's birthday (June 3) are legal holidays.[158]

Monuments edit

Courthouse monuments edit

 
Unveiling of Confederate Monument, Ocala, 1908

Other public monuments edit

  • Crawfordville, Florida, Wakulla County:
    • Confederate Monument (1987): This white obelisk is located in Hudson Park. It is inscribed on one side with an image of a Confederate flag and the words: "1861–1865. In loving memory of those from Wakulla County who served the Confederacy during the war between the states. Erected by the R. Don McLeod Chapter 2469 United Daughters of the Confederacy May 17, 1987."
  • Daytona Beach:
    • Confederate Sun Dial Monument (1961)[32] Originally a marble base and column topped with a sundial (by the early 1980s all that remained was its base and its bronze plaque). Dedicated to the Confederate dead. Erected by United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1961. Plaque was removed by the City of Daytona Beach in 2017 after violent clashes in Charlottesville, Virginia over their Robert E. Lee monument. Was to be given to Halifax Historical Museum.[165]
    • Two other bronze plaques were erected in Riverfront Park by the Sons of Confederate Veterans in 1979 and 1985, which listed the names of Confederate veterans buried in East Volusia County. They were mounted on a long granite wall with other plaques commemorating various US wars. They were also removed by the city in 2017 to also be given to the Halifax Historical Museum.[165]
    • Confederate Boulder Monument (1979)[32]: 33 
  • Dixie County: American Veteran Monument, Highway 98 west of Old Town, dedicated to Confederate veterans (c. 2005)[166]
  • Jefferson County, Florida: Monument to Stonewall Jackson
  • Ellenton:
  • Fernandina Beach: Statue of David Levy Yulee.[170]
 
Yellow Bluff Fort Monument
 
United Daughters of the Confederacy members seated around a Confederate monument in Lakeland, 1915
  • Madison: Confederate monument, Four Freedoms Park (1909). Lists names of men who died from county. Nearby sits a monument to former slaves in the county.[161][32]: 35 
  • Miami: Confederate monument, Confederate Circle in City Cemetery (1914 at the Dade County Courthouse, was moved to cemetery in 1927)[179][32]: 36 
 
Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park
  • Olustee:
    • Battlefield monument, Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park (1912). Inscription: Here was fought on February 20, 1864, the Battle of Ocean Pond under the immediate command of General Alfred Holt Colquitt, "Hero of Olustee." This decisive engagement prevented a Sherman-like invasion of Georgia from the south. Erected April 20, 1936, by the Alfred Holt Colquitt Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy Ga. Div.
    • CSA Brigadier General Joseph Finnegan Monument, Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park (1912). "Placed by The United Daughters of the Confederacy Florida Division In Memory of Brig. Gen. Joseph Finegan Commander of the District of Middle and East Florida So well did he perform his part that a signal victory over the Federals was won in the Battle of Olustee Feb. 20, 1864"
  • Pensacola:
    • Florida Square was renamed Lee Square in 1889.[180]
    • A 50-foot monument to Our Confederate Dead, erected in 1891, is in Lee Square.[181] It commemorates Jefferson Davis, Pensacolian Confederate veterans Stephen R. Mallory (Secretary of the Confederate Navy) and Edward Aylesworth Perry (Confederate General and Governor of Florida 1885–1889), and "the Uncrowned Heroes of the Southern Confederacy." The mayor of Pensacola has called for its removal.[180]
  • Perry: Confederate monument, Taylor County Sports Complex (2007)[182][183]
  • Quincy: Confederate memorial, Soldiers Cemetery within Eastern Cemetery, part of the town's National Register Historic District (2010). The memorial also notes the restoration of the historic fence.[184][185]
  • St. Augustine:
    • Confederate monument, on the Plaza de la Constitución (1879).[186] "The Confederate Memorial Contextualization Advisory Committee, a seven-member task force comprised mostly of historians", in 2018 recommended to the City Commission that the monument be kept, with the addition of "some necessary context".[187]
  • St. Cloud: Confederate monument, Veterans Park (2006)[188]
  • St. Petersburg: Confederate monument, Greenwood Cemetery (1900)[189]
  • Tampa: There is a stained-glass window donated by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1906 in honor of Father Abram Ryan, called "Poet of the Confederacy", in the Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
  • Trenton: Confederate monument, across from Gilchrist County Courthouse in Veterans' Park (2010)[190]
  • Woodville: In Loving Memory Monument, Natural Bridge Battlefield Historic State Park (1922)[32]: 37  A plaque placed at the base of the monument in 2000 lists the names of those who died as a result of the battle.[191]

Private monuments edit

  • Alachua: Confederate monument, Newnansville Cemetery (2002) by the Alachua Lions Club[192]
  • Bradfordville, unincorporated community in Leon County: Robert E. Lee Monument, dedicated along Highway 319 in 1927 by UDC. Moved in the 1960s and 1990s, it is now located about a mile south of the Georgia border.[193][194]
  • Dade City: Confederate memorial, Townsend House Cemetery (2010)[195]
  • Deland: Confederate Veteran Memorial, Oakdale Cemetery (1958)[196]
  • Kissimmee: Granite obelisk in Rose Hill Cemetery, dedicated to Confederate veterans buried in Osceola County with their names listed on the monument. Erected 2002 by Sons of Confederate Veterans.[165]
  • Lake City:
    • Last Confederate War Widow, Oaklawn Cemetery, erected after her death in 1985. The memorial and the cemetery are along the Florida Civil War Heritage Trail.[197][198]: 28 
    • Our Confederate Dead, Oaklawn Cemetery (1901, rededicated 1996). A tall obelisk in memory of the unnamed soldiers who died at the nearby Battle of Olustee or in the town's Confederate hospital. The cemetery is the focal point of the opening of Lake City's annual Olustee Battle Festival.[199][200]
  • Leesburg: Memorial fountain made of rustic limestone, in Lone Oak Cemetery. Erected 1935 by United Daughters of the Confederacy but dedicated to soldiers of all wars. An adjacent 20-foot flagpole and inscribed granite block dedicated to Civil War veterans buried there was erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 2005.[165]
  • Ormond Beach: 2011; Pilgrim's Rest Cemetery. Monument consists of a flagpole and a concrete base with an attached bronze Southern Cross of Honor and a granite slab listing the names of Confederate veterans buried there. Erected by Confederate Sons Association of Florida.[165]
  • Oxford: Upright granite slab monument in Pine Level Cemetery, listing the names of Confederate veterans buried in the cemetery. Erected 2007 by Sons of Confederate Veterans.[165]
  • White Springs: Confederate monument and large flag, along Interstate 75 (2002)[201]

Inhabited places edit

Counties edit

Municipalities edit

Parks edit

  • Ellenton: Judah P. Benjamin Confederate Memorial at Gamble Plantation Historic State Park (1925)[207]
  • Fort Walton Beach: Heritage Park preserves the Confederate Camp Walton named for the county it was located in.[208]
  • Jacksonville:
    • Confederate Park, opened in 1907. Originally named Dignan Park, the park was renamed when UCV chose the locale as the site for their annual reunions in 1914.[209] -now Springfield Park.
    • Hemming Park/Hemming Plaza (1899) renamed in honor of Civil War veteran Charles C. Hemming, after he installed a 62-foot (19 m)-tall Confederate monument in the park in 1898.[210][211] -now James Weldon Johnson Park.
    • Hemming Park station an elevated rail station taking its name from the park. Now James Weldon Johnson Park Station.
  • Miami: Robert E. Lee Park, the athletic field of Jose de Diego Middle School which replaced Robert E. Lee Middle School (1924–1989) in the Wynwood neighborhood in 1999.[212] A school district spokesman has said the name is not official and requested agencies with incorrect listings update them.[213]
  • Pensacola: Lee Square (1889)[95] -now Florida Square.
  • Tampa: Confederate Memorial Park, opened 2008 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Roads edit

Schools and libraries edit

  • Gainesville:
    • J.J. Finley Elementary School (1939), named for CSA Brig. Gen. Jesse J. Finley.[217] -now Carolyn Beatrice Parker Elementary School.
    • Kirby-Smith Center (1939), Alachua County Public Schools administrative offices. Constructed in 1900, the building was initially the all white Gainesville Graded & High School.[218] In August 2017, the school board announced plans to rename the center.[219]
    • Sidney Lanier School. Lanier was a Confederate soldier and poet.
  • Hillsborough County: Robert E. Lee Elementary School aka Lee Elementary Magnet School of World Studies and Technology was built 1906 and named for Lee in 1943. A school board member pushing for a rename in 2017 noted that had Lee's army won the war "a majority of our students would be slaves."[220] -now Tampa Heights Elementary Magnet School.
  • Jacksonville[221]
    • J.E.B. Stuart Middle School (1966), named for CSA Gen. J. E. B. Stuart. -now Westside Middle School.
    • Jefferson Davis Middle School (1961) -now Charger Academy.
    • Kirby-Smith Middle School (1924), named for CSA Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith. -now Springfield Middle School.
    • Robert E. Lee High School (1928) -now Riverside High School.
    • Stonewall Jackson Elementary School -now Hidden Oaks Elementary School.
  • Orlando:
    • Robert E. Lee Middle School, renamed College Park Middle School in 2017.[222]
    • Stonewall Jackson Middle School was renamed Roberto Clemente Middle School in 2020, as was the road in front of the school.
  • Pensacola: Escambia High School's Rebel mascot riots, 1972–1977. Before a noncontroversial name was chosen, protests and violence occurred at the school and in the community, crosses were burned on school district members' lawns, lawsuits were filed, and the Ku Klux Klan held a rally and petitioned the school board.
  • Tampa: Lee Elementary School of Technology / World Studies (1906). The school's mascot is Robert E. Lee's horse Traveller. In July 2015, students asked the school board to change the school's name.[223] In June 2017, a board member asked the board to consider the name change.[224] -now Tampa Heights Elementary School

City symbols edit

  • Hillsborough County: until 1997, the Hillsborough County seal included the Confederate Battle Flag.[225]
  • Panama City: city flag is quite similar to the Florida state flag with a white background and the St Andrews cross echoing the Confederate Battle Flag, but with the city seal replacing the state seal.

City holiday edit

  • On April 2, 2019, Ocala mayor Kent Guinn signed a declaration declaring that April 26, 2019, would be Confederate Memorial Day. He said he has done so in previous years.[226]

County holiday edit

  • In 2016, the Commission of Marion County (county seat Ocala) declared April as Confederate History Month.[164]

Georgia edit

As of June 24, 2020, there are at least 201 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Georgia.[95]

 
Confederate monument in Macon, Ga on Mulberry street circa 1877

Hawaii edit

Idaho edit

The settlement of Idaho coincided with the Civil War and settlers from Southern states memorialized the Confederacy with the names of several towns and natural features.[227][228][229]

As of June 24, 2020, there are at least three public spaces with Confederate monuments in Idaho.[95]

Inhabited places edit

  • Atlanta: unincorporated, and its Atlanta Airport. The area was named by Southerners after reports of a Confederate victory over Gen. Sherman in the Battle of Atlanta, which turned to be wholly false, but the name stuck.
  • Confederate Gulch: unincorporated former mining community.[230][229]
  • Grayback Gulch: unincorporated former mining community, settled by Confederate soldiers and named for the color of their uniforms. Now a U.S. Forest Service campground.[231]
  • Leesburg: an unincorporated former goldmining town settled by southerners and named for Robert E. Lee.[232]

Natural features and recreation edit

Illinois edit

 
Confederate Monument at Oak Woods Cemetery in Chicago

The four memorials in Illinois are in Federal cemeteries and connected with prisoners of war.

Federal cemeteries edit

Federal plot within private cemetery edit

Indiana edit

As of June 24, 2020, there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Indiana.[95]

 
Confederate monument, Crown Hill National Cemetery, Indianapolis

Iowa edit

As of June 24, 2020, there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Iowa.[95]

Kansas edit

Veterans Memorial Park in Wichita, Kansas holds one Confederate and Union monument, a Reconciliation Memorial. "The intent of this memorial is to bring folks together and reconcile their differences," As Confederate Monuments Come Down Across U.S., Wichita Memorial Comes Into Question. The Memorial is a small obelisk with text honoring North and South combatants on both sides. See Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials#Kansas for monuments which have been removed.

Kentucky edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 37 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Kentucky.[95]

Monuments edit

 
Confederate Monument, Georgetown
 
Confederate Monument, Spring Hill Cemetery, Harrodsburg
 
John B. Castleman Monument, Louisville
 
Lloyd Tilghman Statue, Paducah

Bridge edit

Inhabited places edit

Parks edit

Roads edit

Highways edit

Schools edit

Louisiana edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 83 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Louisiana.[95]

State capitol edit

  • Gov. Francis T. Nicholls Statue (1934). Nicholls was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army.
  • Gov. Henry Watkins Allen Statue (1934). Allen was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army. He is buried on the Old Louisiana State Capitol grounds.
  • "Silent Sentinel" Monument, officially the Confederate Soldiers of East and West Baton Rouge Parishes Memorial. Plinth erected 1886 and statue in 1890. Dedicated by Gov. John McEnery. Original granite and marble plinth cracked; replaced in the 1960s with a small brick plinth that was aesthetically unappealing. Formerly at North Boulevard and 3rd Street, near City Hall. In 2012, to make room for Town Square construction, it was moved to the nearby Old Louisiana State Capitol, now a museum.[281] Plaque reads: "Erected by the men and women of East and West Baton Rouge to perpetuate the heroism and patriotic devotion of the noble soldiers from the two parishes who wore the gray and crossed the river with their immortal leaders to rest under the shade of the trees. Original monument erected 1886 A.D."

Buildings edit

 
Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans

Monuments edit

Courthouse monuments edit

Other public monuments edit

 
Greenwood Cemetery, New Orleans
 
Army of Tennessee Tomb, Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans
 
Monument at Camp Moore, Tangipahoa Parish
 
Charles Didier Dreux statue in New Orleans

Inhabited places edit

Parks edit

Roads edit

  • Baton Rouge:
    • Confederate Avenue
    • Jeff Davis Street
    • Lee Drive[95]
  • Bell City: Jeff Davis Road
  • Bogalusa: Jefferson Davis Drive
  • Bossier City:
    • General Bragg Drive
    • General Ewell Drive
    • General Polk Drive
    • General Sterling Price Drive
    • Jeb Stuart Drive
    • Kirby Smith Drive
    • Longstreet Place
    • Robert E. Lee Boulevard
    • Robert E. Lee Street
  • Chalmette: Beauregard Street
  • Gretna: Beauregard Drive
  • Houma: Jefferson Davis Street
  • Lafayette: Jeff Davis Drive
  • Lake Charles:
    • Beauregard Drive
    • Beauregard Avenue
    • Beauregard Street
  • Merryville: Robert E. Lee Road
  • Monroe: Jefferson Davis Drive
  • New Orleans:
    • Beauregard Drive
    • Dreux Avenue, named for Confederate General Charles Didier Dreux
    • Gayarre Place, named for Charles Gayarré, a financial supporter of the Confederacy. Clio, muse or goddess of history, is on a monument. (Gayarré was a historian.) The monument was paid for by George Hacker Dunbar, an artilleryman during the Civil War, married to a niece of General Beauregard. The original statue was replaced in 1938, after vandals damaged it.[297]
    • Governor Nicholls Street
    • Jefferson Davis Parkway. Originally named Hagan Avenue; name changed in 1911 to coincide with the unveiling of the Jefferson Davis Monument.[295] -now Norman C. Francis Parkway.
    • Lee Circle[95]
    • Polk Street
    • Robert E. Lee Boulevard
    • Slidell Street
  • Pineville:
    • Jefferson Davis Drive
    • Longstreet Drive
  • Rayne: Jeff Davis Avenue

Schools edit

Confederate flag display edit

Maryland edit

 
The Confederate Soldier, Loudon Park National Cemetery, Baltimore

There are at least 7 confederate monuments on public land. They are generally in or near cemeteries.

As of December 27, 2022 there is one statue on a large stone of general Lee at the Antietam battlefield, visible from the road.

It was on private land adjacent to the park, and was donated with the land. 

The "Talbot Boys" statue in Easton, Maryland was the last Confederate monument removed from public property on March 14, 2022.

State symbols edit

 
Flag of Maryland since 1904
  • Flag of Maryland (1904). The state flag of Maryland features the red-and-white Crossland Banner, the unofficial state flag of Maryland used by secessionists and Confederates during the American Civil War.[302][303][304][305] The current state flag started appearing after the Civil War as a form of reconciliation. The flag became official in 1904.
  • The former state song "Maryland, My Maryland" calls on the state to join the Confederacy.[306] Prior to 2021, the Maryland General Assembly voted nine times to repeal, replace, or alter the state song, all without any success. In 2017, the Mighty Sound of Maryland, the marching band of the University of Maryland at College Park, stopped playing the song.[307] In March 2021, both houses of the Maryland General Assembly voted by substantial margins to abandon "Maryland, My Maryland" as the state song. On May 18, 2021, governor Larry Hogan signed the bill officially repealing the state song.[308] Since then, Maryland has had no official state song.

Monuments edit

Public monuments edit

Private monuments edit

 
Monument to the Unknown Confederate Soldiers, Frederick, Maryland
  • Beallsville: Memorial to Confederate soldiers at Monocacy Cemetery (1911; replaced 1975).[315]
  • Frederick: Monument to the Unknown Confederate Soldiers (1881), Mount Olivet Cemetery[316]
  • Silver Spring: Confederate Monument, Grace Episcopal Church Cemetery, 1896. Commemorated the death and burial of 17 unknown Confederate Soldiers who died at the Battle of Fort Stevens. The monument, a stone obelisk, could be seen from Georgia Ave.[317][318]
  • Fox's Gap, Frederick County, Maryland: North Carolina Monument (2003): The monument is a life sized bronze figure of a wounded Confederate color bearer on a base of black granite. It was created by sculptor Gary Casteel for the Living History association of Mecklinburg, North Carolina, and unveiled on October 18, 2003. It is dedicated to all the North Carolina troops who fought in the Battle of South Mountain. Fox's Gap is the southernmost battlefield of the Battle of South Mountain. The property is owned by the Central Maryland Heritage League, a battlefield protection group.[319]
 
North Carolina Memorial at Fox's Gap (2003)
  • White's Ferry, Montgomery County: Confederate Monument, a granite pedestal.
     
    The base of the CSA monument moved from Rockville, MD, to White's Ferry, MD.
The original monument, a bronze life-sized Confederate soldier on this pedestal, was originally donated by the UDC and the United Confederate Veterans, and built by the Washington firm of Falvey Granite Company at a cost of US$3,600 (equivalent to $106,594 in 2022). The artist is unknown.[320] The inscription says "To Our Heroes of Montgomery Co. Maryland That We Through Life May Not Forget to Love The Thin Gray Line / Erected A.D. 1913 / 1861 CSA 1865."[321] because Confederate uniforms are gray. The Rockville dedication was on June 3, 1913, Jefferson Davis's birthday,[321] and was attended by 3,000 out of a county population of 30,000.[322] It was originally located in a small triangular park[323] called Courthouse Square. In 1971, urban renewal led to the elimination of the Square, and the monument was moved to the east lawn of the Red Brick Courthouse (no longer in use as such), facing south.[324] In 1994 it was cleaned and waxed by the Maryland Military Monuments Commission.[320] The monument was defaced with "Black Lives Matter" in 2015; a wooden box was built over it to protect it.[325] The monument was removed in July 2017 from its original location outside the Old Rockville Court House to private land[323] at White's Ferry in Dickerson, Maryland.[326][327] The statue was removed from the pedestal in June 2020, but the pedestal urging people to "Love The Thin Gray Line" remains.

Inhabited places edit

Roads edit

Ferry edit

 
Gen. Jubal A. Early
 
The renamed White's Ferry ferryboat

Gallery edit

Massachusetts edit

As of May 2019, all public memorials listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center[95] had been removed.[333]

Private memorials edit

  • Cambridge
    • Memorial Hall, Harvard University. Stained-glass windows to commemorate various figures, among them:
      • Honor and Peace Window (1900). There is no inscription, but a Harvard University page (Memorial Hall) explaining the windows says: "This window commemorates those who surrendered their lives in the War of the Rebellion." Portrays two warriors, one with sword high in triumph, one kneeling in defeat, who from the ribbons can be seen to be from different but related countries.
      • Student and Soldier Window (1889). Soldier wears gray uniform.

Michigan edit

As of June 29, 2020, there is at least one known public monument of a confederate soldier in Michigan. It is located in Allendale, Michigan, a town in Ottawa County. A part of the Veterans Garden of Honor (1998) which features nine life sized statues of soldiers from various wars, the statue in question depicts a union soldier and a confederate soldier back to back with a young slave at their feet holding a plaque reading "Freedom to Slaves," and the date January 5, 1863.[334]

Minnesota edit

Murray County Central High School uses a Rebel mascot and the nickname Rebels.[335]

Mississippi edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 147 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Mississippi.[95]

Missouri edit

As of 24 June 2020, there were at least 19 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Missouri.[95]

Monuments edit

Courthouse monuments edit

 
Statue of David Rice Atchison in front of the Clinton County Courthouse, Plattsburg, Missouri

Other public monuments edit

 
UDC monument at Forest Hill and Calvary Cemetery, Kansas City, Missouri
 
Union Confederate Monument, Union Cemetery, Kansas City, Missouri

Inhabited places edit

Parks edit

Roads edit

Schools edit

Montana edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 2 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Montana.[95]

Nevada edit

As of June 24, 2020, there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Nevada.[95]

New Jersey edit

 
Confederate Monument (1910), Finn's Point National Cemetery.

There are at least two public spaces dedicated to the Confederacy in New Jersey.[95]

New Mexico edit

As of June 24, 2020, there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in New Mexico.[95]

New York edit

 
Confederate Monument, Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira, New York

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 3 public spaces with Confederate monuments in New York.[95][357]

Monuments edit

Public monuments edit

  • The Bronx: Busts of Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee were in the Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College. The college removed the busts in 2020.[358][359]
  • Central Park: J. Marion Sims. In November 2017, the cover of Harper's Magazine featured J. C. Hallman's article "Monumental Error," about the Central Park monument of controversial surgeon – and Confederate spy – J. Marion Sims.[360] The timing coincided with the work New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio's committee on monuments, and Hallman's article was distributed to members of New York's Public Design Commission. The commission voted unanimously to remove Sims's statue, and it was removed in April 2018.[361] Hallman has since written articles about Sims's statue in Montgomery, Alabama, and is working on a book, The Anarcha Quest, about Sims and his so-called "first cure," Anarcha Westcott.[362]

Private monuments edit

Roads edit

  • Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn:
    • General Lee Avenue. The avenue was renamed to John Warren Avenue in 2022, to honor a 22-year-old lieutenant in the Army who was killed in the Vietnam War in January 1969.[366]
    • Stonewall Jackson Drive. The road was later renamed to Washington Road in 2022, shortly after the renaming of General Lee Avenue.
Governor Andrew Cuomo had twice requested the Army, unsuccessfully, to have these streets renamed.[359]

North Carolina edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 164 public spaces with Confederate monuments in North Carolina.[95]

Ohio edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 5 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Ohio.[95]

Historical marker edit

Monuments edit

 
Confederate Soldier Memorial, Camp Chase, Columbus
 
The Lookout (1910), Johnson's Island, Ottawa County[370]

Inhabited places edit

  • Confederate Hills, a neighborhood in Batavia Township named for the Confederate cause that is home to roads named for a CSA leader and various southern locations, notably Stanton Hall and the Natchez Trace.

Roads edit

  • Batavia Township:
  • Day Heights:
  • Fairfield:
    • Robert E Lee Drive, memorializing CSA Gen. Robert E. Lee.
    • Stonewall Lane, memorializing CSA Gen. Stonewall Jackson.
  • Mt. Repose:
    • Beauregard Court, memorializing CSA Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard.
    • Jeb Stuart Drive, memorializing CSA Gen. J. E. B. Stuart.
    • Monassas Run Road, memorializing the CSA victory at the battle at Manassas, known to the North as Bull Run.
    • Stonewall Jackson Drive, memorializing CSA Gen. Stonewall Jackson.

Schools edit

  • Cleveland: John Adams High School uses the Rebels team name, but the mascot more closely resembles a cavalier than a Confederate soldier.[375]
  • Mcconnelsville: Morgan High School is named for Confederate General John Hunt Morgan. Their nickname is the "Raiders".
  • Willoughby: Willoughby South High School dropped its Confederate uniformed mascot and removed all remaining Confederate imagery from the school while retaining the Rebels team name and school colors grey and blue. In 1993 the school dropped Stars and Bars as the school song and removed Confederate imagery from school uniforms.[375]

Oklahoma edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 13 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Oklahoma.[95]

Buildings edit

  • Ardmore: Oklahoma Confederate Home, operated as OK Confederate Home from 1911 to 1942. Renamed Oklahoma Veterans Center after last residing confederate veteran passed.[376][377]

Monuments edit

 
Stand Watie Monument, Polson Cemetery, Delaware County
 
Confederate Monument at Cherokee National Capitol

Schools edit

 
Robert E. Lee School in Durant, Oklahoma
  • Durant: Robert E. Lee Elementary School[384]
  • Oklahoma City: school board studying renaming in 2017
    • Robert E. Lee Elementary School (1910)[385] -now Adelaide Lee Elementary School.
    • Jackson Elementary School (1910)[385] -now Mary Golda Ross Enterprise Elementary School.
    • Wheeler Elementary School (1910)[385]
    • Stand Watie Elementary School (1930)[385] -now Esperanza Elementary School.
  • Pauls Valley: Lee Elementary School[95]

Inhabited places edit

Roads edit

  • Jay: Stand Watie Road

Oregon edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are no public spaces with Confederate monuments in Oregon.[95]

Pennsylvania edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 3 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Pennsylvania.[95]

Monuments edit

 
Virginia State Monument (1917), Gettysburg Battlefield.
 
Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument (1911), Philadelphia National Cemetery.

Roads edit

  • Gettysburg: Confederate Avenue
  • McConnellsburg: Confederate Lane

Rhode Island edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are no public spaces with Confederate monuments in Rhode Island.[95]

South Carolina edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 194 public spaces with Confederate monuments in South Carolina.[95][389]

South Dakota edit

In July 2020 the Confederate flag was removed from the patch of Gettysburg South Dakota police officers.

As of June 24, 2020, there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in South Dakota.[95]

  • Gettysburg: The Gettysburg police uniforms feature a patch with overlapping U.S. and Confederate flags and a civil-war era cannon along with the city's name, in a nod to the city's namesake, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, site of the famous Battle of Gettysburg.[390] The historical reference logo for the police emblem and uniform patch was designed in 2009.[391][95]

Tennessee edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 105 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Tennessee.[95] The Tennessee Heritage Protection Act (2016) and a 2013 law restrict the removal of statues and memorials.[43]

The Tennessee legislature designated Confederate Decoration Day, the origin of Memorial Day, as June 3, and in 1969[392] designated January 19 and July 13, their birthdays, as Robert E. Lee Day and Nathan Bedford Forrest day respectively.

State capitol edit

  • Nathan Bedford Forrest Bust. On display in the Capital rotunda since 1978. Former governor Bill Haslam wished to remove it, but he was not supported by the Legislature or the Capitol Commission. "In 2010, the state moved the Forrest bust from outside the doors of the House of Representatives' chamber to its current location between the legislature's two chambers. It was relocated in order to make room for a bust of Sampson Keeble, Tennessee's first black legislator."[393] In January 2019 a group of students demonstrated at the capital, calling for its removal.[394]

Buildings edit

  • Greeneville: General Morgan Inn, located at the spot where Confederate general John Hunt Morgan was killed.
  • Harrogate: [1] Grant Lee Building at Lincoln Memorial University was named in honor of the two famous civil war generals. Lincoln Memorial University was named in honor of Abraham Lincoln.
  • Murfreesboro: Forrest Hall at Middle Tennessee State University. The Tennessee Board of Regents has unanimously recommended the name change, on the recommendation of a campus task force, and the university president, but it has yet to pass the Tennessee Historical Commission, which plans "public hearings."[395][396]

Monuments edit

Courthouse monuments edit

 
Tipton County Courthouse, Covington
 
Confederate Monument "Chip", Franklin
 
Confederate Women monument, Nashville

Other public monuments edit

 
Pyramid of cannonballs commemorate Patrick Cleburne in Franklin, Tennessee
  • Franklin: Confederal "Funeral Rest" Memorial, Rose Hill Cemetery[397]
  • Gallatin: Confederate Soldiers Monument (1903)
  • Hamilton County: Chickamauga & Chattanooga National Military Park. Numerous monuments and memorials to Confederate soldiers and units, as well as Union monuments.
  • Humboldt: Confederate Monument (1900), Bailey Park
  • Knoxville:
    • A stone monument was erected in 1914 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy at the corner of 17th Street and Laurel Avenue, in the Fort Sanders neighborhood, defaced in August 2017.[407]
    • Civil War Memorial (1901), Knoxville National Cemetery
    • Monument to the Confederate dead (1892), Bethel Avenue[397]
    • Historical marker, with Confederate flag, in front of Immaculate Conception Church, for Father Abram Ryan, called "Poet of the Confederacy".
  • Lebanon:
    • Confederate Memorial Gen. Hatton Statue (1912)
    • Rutherford County: grounds around the County Courthouse contain a 1901 monument to the Confederacy and a 2011 memorial to those from the County who served in the Army of Tennessee.
  • Lynchburg: Confederate Veterans Memorial, Moore County Public Square[397]
  • Memphis:
    • Monument to Captain J. Harvey Mathes, 37th Tennessee CSA[408]
    • Confederate Memorial (1878), Elmwood Cemetery, 824 Dudley Street[397]
  • Mount Pleasant: Confederate Monument (1907)
  • Mulberry: Confederate Memorial (1909)
  • Murfreesboro: Confederate Circle in Evergreen Cemetery was established in 1891 as a memorial to approximately 2,000 Confederate soldiers whose remains were reinterred there.
  • Nashville:
  • Obion: Obion Veterans Memorial, honoring those who were killed in service and were MIA-POW in Civil War, World Wars I & II, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm, Afghanistan and Iraq (2006)[397]
  • Parkers Crossroads:
    • Freeman's Battery (2002)
    • Morton's Battery (2007)
  • Pulaski:
  • Santa Fe: Memorial plaque to Maury [County] Light Artillery (Confederate), public square.[397]
  • Tazewell: Confederate memorial (2000) honoring unknown Confederate dead; located in Irish Memorial Cemetery.[397]
  • Trimble: Cemetery Ridge Memorial Plaza, honoring Merion Spence Parks and Williams Hamilton Parks II, members of UDC and SCV respectively (2012)[397]
  • Union City
    • Confederate Monument, Kiwanis Park (1909)
    • Confederate Monument to Unknown Soldiers, Old Soldiers' Cemetery, Summer Street at Edwards Street (1869)[397]
  • Winchester
    • UDC Memorial to Confederate soldiers (1950), City Cemetery
    • SCV Memorial to Confederate soldiers (2003), Confederate Cemetery, adjoining the City Cemetery"[397]
  • Woodbury: 1926 monument "honors all confederate soldiers and marks the spot where CSA Lt. Col. John B. Hutchenson was killed."[397]

Private monuments edit

  • Nashville
    • Nathan Bedford Forrest Statue, made of fiberglass over foam, 25 feet high, on private land[412] near Interstate 65, installed in 1998, built with private money. It is surrounded by Confederate battle flags, constituting what the owner calls "Confederate Flag Park." (No government recognizes it as a park, and the entrance is chained shut with a "No Trespassing" sign.) The giant statue is visible from the highway to anyone entering the city from the south.[413] It has been called "hideous"[413] and "ridiculous."[414] There have been numerous calls for its removal. Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam said: "It's not a statue that I like and [ sic ] that most Tennesseans are proud of in any way."[415] Former Nashville Mayor Megan Barry called the statue "an offensive display of hatred."[415] In 2015, Nashville's Metro Council voted to petition the Tennessee Department of Transportation to plant obscuring vegetation;[416] the Department declined, because it is private land.[413] ("Never mind that the T.D.O.T. itself removed the obscuring vegetation back in 1998, when the statue was first erected."[413][415]) There has been occasional vandalism; in December 2017 it was covered in "pussy-hat pink" paint,[413] which Bill Dorris, current owner of the land, says he intends to leave.[417] He also said that if trees are planted to block the view from I-65, he "would make the statue taller."[412] It was sculpted, at no charge, by notorious racist Jack Kershaw, an attorney for Martin Luther King's murderer, famous for having said "Somebody needs to say a good word for slavery."[418][419]

Inhabited place edit

Parks edit

Roads edit

  • Brentwood
    • Jefferson Davis Drive
    • Robert E. Lee Lane
  • Culleoka: General Lee Road
  • Dandridge
    • Jeb Stuart Drive
    • Stonewall Jackson Drive
  • Elizabethton: Stonewall Jackson Drive
  • Eva: Jeff Davis Drive
  • Forest Hills: Robert E. Lee Drive
  • Franklin:
    • General J.B. Hood Drive
    • General Nathan Bedford Forrest Drive
    • Jeb Stuart Drive
    • Jefferson Davis Drive
  • Gallatin: Robert Lee Drive
  • Nashville:
    • Beauregard Drive
    • Jefferson Davis Drive
    • Confederate Drive
    • General Forrest Court
    • Robert E. Lee Court
    • Robert E. Lee Drives (two different streets with the same name)
  • Newport
    • Robert E. Lee Drive
    • Stonewall Jackson Driv
  • Oak Hill: Stonewall Jackson Court
  • Pulaski
    • Sam Davis Avenue
    • Sam Davis Trail
  • Sardis: Jeff Davis Lane
  • Smyrna
    • Jeb Stuart Drive
    • Lee Lane[95]
    • Longstreet Drive
    • Robert E. Lee Lane
    • Sam Davis Road
    • Stonewall Drive

Schools edit

  • Chapel Hill: Forrest High School
  • Nashville: Father Ryan High School, named for Abram Ryan, called "Poet of the Confederacy".
  • Paris: Robert E. Lee School – now called Paris Academy for the Arts.
  • Sewanee: The University of the South: "Nowhere is the issue of Confederate remembrance more nettlesome than at Sewanee, whose origin[s] are entwined with the antebellum South and the Confederacy."[420] Confederate flags are in stained glass windows of the chapel, as is the Seal of the Confederacy.[420] It benefited greatly at its founding by a large gift from John Armfield, at one time co-owner of Franklin and Armfield, the largest and most prosperous slave trading enterprise in the country. Students as late as 1871 were required to wear uniforms of "cadet gray cloth".[421] Confederate flags hung in the chapel from its dedication in 1909 until the mid-1990s when they were removed "reportedly to improve acoustics".[422] There is an official portrait hanging at the University of Bishop Leonidas Polk, "an ardent defender of slavery,"[420] who was in charge of the celebration of the cornerstone laying in 1857, and said the new university will "materially aid the South to resist and repel a fanatical domination which seeks to rule over us."[423] He resigned his ecclesiastical position to become a major general in the Confederate army (called "Sewanee's Fighting Bishop"), and died in battle in 1864. His official portrait at the University depicts him dressed as a bishop with his army uniform hanging nearby. However, his portrait was moved from Convocation Hall to Archives and Special Collections in 2015.[424] The Confederate flag was also emblazoned on the university mace that led processions marking the beginning and ending of the term from 1965 until 1997. At a special chapel service to celebrate Jefferson Davis' birthday, the Ceremonial Mace was consecrated to the memory of Nathan Bedford Forrest, the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, by Bishop Charles C. J. Carpenter of Alabama – one of the clergy who opposed Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s activities in Birmingham in 1963 (see A Call for Unity), prompting King to write his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" in response.[422]
 
Calhoun Hall, named for slave owner and Confederate supporter W. H. Calhoun.

Tourist sites edit

  • Pigeon Forge: "Rebel Railroad" was a small theme park built in 1961, its main attraction being a simulated Confederate steam train which afforded "'good Confederate citizens' the opportunity to ride a five mile train route through 'hostile' territory and to help repel a Yankee assault on the train". Rebel Railroad was purchased in 1970 by Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland Browns.[436][437][438] In 2018 it is operating under the name Dollywood.
  • Morristown, General Longstreet Headquarters Museum[439]

Texas edit

As of 24 June 2020, there are at least 205 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Texas.[95][440] "Nowhere has the national re-examination of Confederate emblems been more riven with controversy than the Lone Star State."[441]

State capitol edit

  • "The Texas Capitol itself is a Confederate monument," according to then-Land Commissioner Jerry E. Patterson.[442] The Texas Confederate Museum was once housed in the Capitol.
    • Confederate Soldiers Monument (1903) features four bronze figures representing the Confederate artillery, cavalry, infantry, and navy. A bronze statue of Jefferson Davis stands above them.[443] The inscription reads: "Died for state rights guaranteed under the constitution. The people of the South, animated by the spirit of 1776, to preserve their rights, withdrew from the federal compact in 1861. The North resorted to coercion. The South, against overwhelming numbers and resources, fought until exhausted."[444]
    • Hood's Texas Brigade, a monument "to memorialize those [who] fought for the Confederacy".[445] "The monument includes a depiction of a Confederate soldier, quotes by Confederate leaders, a flag of the Confederacy and the Confederate battle flag."[446] These are the only Confederate flags currently (2017) visible in the Capitol.[447] Representative Eric Johnson has called for its removal.[446]
    • Terry's Texas Rangers Monument, a monument "to memorialize those [who] fought for the Confederacy"[445] (1907).

State symbols edit

 
Seal of Texas
  • The reverse side of the Seal of Texas (1992) includes "the unfurled flags of the Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Spain, the United Mexican States, the Republic of Texas, the Confederate States of America, and the United States of America". The Confederate flag is rendered as the Stars and Bars.

State holiday edit

  • Confederate Heroes Day is celebrated on January 19. State employees have the day off.
  • April is Confederate History Month in Texas.[448]

Buildings edit

Monuments edit

Many monuments were donated by pro-Confederacy groups like Daughters of the Confederacy. County governments at the time voted to accept the gifts and take ownership of the statues.[449][450]

Courthouse monuments edit

  • Alpine: Confederate Colonel Henry Percy Brewster (1963)[451]
  • Aspermont: Historical marker, "County Named for Confederate Hero Stonewall Jackson", Stonewall County Courthouse (1963)
  • Bastrop: Monuments at Bastrop County Courthouse include:
  • Bay City: Confederate Soldiers' Monument (1913), Matagorda County Courthouse[454][455]
  • Belton: Confederate Soldiers' Monument, Bell County Courthouse[456]
  • Bonham: Confederate Soldiers' Monument (1905), Fannin County Courthouse[457]
  • Bryan: Commemorative marker, erected 1965, to the Brazos County Confederate Commissioners Court.[458]
  • Comanche: Confederate Soldiers' Monument (2002), Comanche County Courthouse[459]
  • Corsicana: Call to Arms (Confederate Soldiers' Monument), by Louis Amateis (1907), Navarro County Courthouse.[460][461] A Civil War bugler stands in uniform holding a bugle to his mouth with his proper right hand. He holds a sword in his proper left hand at his side. He wears a hat with a feather in it and knee-high boots. A bedroll is slung over his proper left shoulder and strapped across his chest and proper right hip. The sculpture is mounted on a rectangular base.[462] "Isaac O'Haver was a member of Co K of the 17th VA Cavalry. He was a 17 year-old bugler for his unit. He was born Sep. 20, 1844 and died at the age of 27 on March 30, 1872. He is buried at the Ladoga Cemetery."[463] The plaques on the monument read:
    • South side: The Call to Arms Erected 1907 by Navarro chapter United Daughters of the Confederacy To commemorate the valor and heroism of our Confederate Soldiers It is not in the power of mortals to command success The Confederate Soldier did more – he deserved it. "But their fame on brightest pages penned by poets and by pages Shall go sounding down the ages"
    • West side: "Nor shall your glory be fought while fame her record keeps or honor points the hollowed spot where valor proudly sleeps" "Tell it as you may It never can be told Sing it as you Will It never can be sung The Story of the Glory of the men who wore the gray"
    • East side: "It is a duty we owe the dead who died for us: – But where memories can never die – It is a duty we owe to posterity to see that our children shall know the virtues And rise worthy of their sires".
    • North side: The soldiers of the Southern Confederacy fought valiantly for The liberty of state bequeathed them By their forefathers of 1776 "Who Glorified Their righteous cause and they who made The sacrifice supreme in That they died To keep their country free"[462]
  • Clarksville: Confederate Soldiers' Monument, Red River County County Courthouse[464]
 
Denton, Texas
  • Denton: Denton Confederate Soldier Monument, Denton County Courthouse.[465] Cost $2,000; a project of the Denton Chapter, UDC. Dedicated June 3, 1918, Jefferson Davis's birthday.[466] It had "whites only" drinking fountains on each side.[467] In 2015 it was defaced with the words "THIS IS RACIST" in red paint.[468] The twenty-year campaign of a Denton resident, Willie Hudspeth, to have the monument removed was the subject of a Vice news video in 2018.[467] After the wave of Confederate monument removals that followed the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and in large part as a result of Hudspeth's campaign, a county 15-person Confederate Memorial Committee met for three months in 2017–18 and recommended "adding context" – two video kiosks and a large plaque, "with interviews about local veterans and the history of slavery"[469] – to the monument rather than removing it, a suggestion accepted unanimously by the county commissioners. Once the nature of the historical context has been determined, approval of the Texas Historical Commission will be required.[470] As of September 2018, "the county still does not have a timeline for completing the project and...there were no updates to report".[471] The video caught the attention of Kali Holloway, director of the Make It Right Project, which is working to remove Confederate monuments. She added the Denton monument to the group's "top 10 list" of monuments they consider priorities.[242][471] The statue was removed in June 2020.[472]
  • Fort Worth: Monument to "Confederate Soldiers and their Descendents" (1953), Tarrant County Courthouse[473]
 
Dignified Resignation in Galveston, Texas
  • Galveston: Dignified Resignation (1909) by Louis Amateis at the Galveston County Courthouse. With his back turned to the US flag while carrying a Confederate flag, it is the only memorial in Texas to feature a Confederate sailor.[474][475] It was "erected to the soldiers and sailors of the Confederate States of America." An inscription on the plaque reads, "there has never been an armed force which in purity of motives intensity of courage and heroism has equaled the army and navy of the Confederate States of America."[444]
  • Gainesville: Confederate Soldiers' Monument, Cooke County Courthouse (1911)[476][477]
 
Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Georgetown, Texas
 
Confederate Mothers Monument in Texarkana

Other public monuments edit

 
Confederate Memorial Plaza in Anderson, Texas
 
Confederate Soldiers Monument, Austin
 
Confederate Monument, Beaumont
  • Alpine: CSA Gen. Lawrence "Sul" Ross Monument (1963)
  • Anderson: Confederate Memorial Plaza (2010).[507] The plaza beside the Grimes County courthouse flies a Confederate flag behind a gate with metal lettering reading "Confederate Memorial Plaza." A metal statue depicts one of several Grimes County residents who fought with the 4th Texas volunteer infantry brigade in Virginia.[444]
  • Athens: Henderson County Confederate Monument (1964)
  • Austin:
    • Hood's Texas Brigade Monument, Texas State Capitol
    • Littlefield Fountain, University of Texas, commemorates George W. Littlefield, a university regent and CSA officer. An inscription reads, "To the men and women of the Confederacy who fought with valor and suffered with fortitude that states [sic] rights be maintained."
    • Texas Confederate Women's and Men's Historical Markers, at 3710 Cedar St. and 1600 W. Sixth, commemorate campgrounds built to house and care for widows, wives, and veterans of the Confederacy.[445]
  • Beaumont: "Our Confederate Soldiers" Monument (1912). Removed in June 2020.[508]
  • Clarksville: Confederate Soldier Monument (1912)
  • Cleburne: Cleburne Monument (2015) Confederate Arch (1922)
  • Coleman: Hometown of Texas CSA Col. James E. McCord Monument (1963)
  • College Station: A statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Confederate general and former president of A&M University is located on the campus of Texas A&M University. In August 2017 the Chancellor of the university, John Sharp, confirmed that the university will not be removing the statue from the campus.[509]
  • Corpus Christi: Queen of the Sea (1914; restored 1990), bas-relief by Pompeo Coppini; UDC-sponsored Confederate memorial featuring an allegorical female figure – representing Corpus Christie – holding keys of success while receiving blessings from Mother Earth and Father Neptune, who are standing next to her.[474] "Coppini was abhorrent of war", and in Queen of the Sea "he crafted a sculpture that symbolized peace and captured the spirit of Corpus Christi".[510]
  • El Paso:
    • Hometown of Texas CSA Capt. James W. Magoffin Monument (1964)
    • CSA Maj. Simeon Hart Monument (1964)
  • Farmersville: Confederate Soldier Monument (1917), Farmersville City Park[511]
  • Fort Worth: Confederate Soldier Memorial (1939), Oakwood Cemetery[474]
  • Gainesville Confederate Heroes Statue (1908) in Leonard Park[512][513]
  • Gonzales: Confederate Soldiers' Monument, Confederate Square. Dedicated on June 3, 1909. To "our Confederate dead."[514][515]
  • Greenville: Confederate Soldier Monument (1926)
  • Holliday: Stonewall Jackson Camp 249 Monument (1999)
  • Houston:
  • Kermit: Col. C.M. Winkler Monument (1963)
  • Marshall:
    • Confederate Capitol of Missouri Monument (1963)
    • Confederate Monument (1906)
    • Home of Last Texas Confederate Gov. Pendleton Murrah Monument (1963)
  • Miami: Col. O.M. Roberts Monument (1963)
 
John H. Reagan Memorial in Palestine, Texas. The allegorical figure seated beneath Reagan represents the Lost Cause of the Confederacy.[474]

Private monuments edit

 
Confederate Veterans Memorial Plaza, Palestine, Texas
  • Austin: Confederate monument, Oakwood Cemetery. Erected in 2016 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[518]
  • Belton: Monument to Confederate Sargeant Jacob Hemphill. Erected 2016 by Sons of Confederate Veterans.[519]
  • Crowley: "Confederate Veterans Memorial Monument honoring The Confederate Veterans of Crowley and the surrounding area interred at the Crowley Cemetery." Erected 2011 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[519]
  • Hempstead: The Liendo Plantation was a center for Confederate recruiting efforts and held Union prisoners during the war. Now it holds battle reenactments and demonstrations of Civil War era Confederate life at its annual Civil War Weekend.
  • Orange: The Confederate Memorial of the Wind, located on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, but visible from I-10, has been under construction since 2013, and will be the largest Confederate monument built since 1916, according to the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[441] A center stone ring is held aloft by 13 pillars, one for each state that seceded. There are twenty commemorative flagpoles.
  • Palestine: Confederate Veterans Memorial Plaza (2013), funded by the Sons of the Confederate Veterans[520]

Inhabited places edit

Counties edit

Municipalities edit

Museums edit

Parks edit

  • Confederate Reunion Grounds State Historic Site, Limestone County, near Mexia, Texas
  • Davis Mountains State Park (1938) named for the mountain range
  • Davis Mountains (geographic feature in West Texas around and named for Fort Davis)
  • Fort Worth: Jefferson Davis Park.[525] -now Unity Park.
  • Holliday: Stonewall Jackson Campground
  • Lakeside, Tarrant County: Confederate Park. The two Confederate flags displayed on each side of the park's marker were removed by the Texas Department of Public Transportation in 2017. Marker text:

    Site of Confederate Park // Local businessman Khleber M. Van Zandt organized the Robert E. Lee Camp of the United Confederate Veterans in 1889. By 1900 it boasted more than 700 members. The Club received a 25-year charter to create the Confederate Park Association in 1901, then purchased 373 acres (151 ha) near this site for the "recreation, refuge and relief of Confederate soldiers" and their families. Opening events included a picnic for veterans and families on June 20, 1902, and a statewide reunion September 8–12, 1902, with 3,500 attendees. The park thrived as a center for the civil and social activities on Texas Confederate organizations. By 1924 the numbers [ sic ] of surviving veterans had greatly diminished, and the Confederate Park Association dissolved when its charter expired in 1926.

    [525]
  • Palestine: John H. Reagan Park

Roads edit

  • Austin:
    • In July 2018, at approximately the same time that Robert E. Lee Road and Jeff Davis Avenue were renamed, the city's Equity Office recommended changing the names of seven more streets:
  • Conroe:
    • Beauregard Drive
    • Jubal Early Lane
    • Stonewall Jackson Drive
  • El Paso: Robert E. Lee Road – now Buffalo Soldier Road
  • Hamilton: Stonewall Jackson Road
  • Hillsboro: Confederate Drive
  • Hemphill:
    • Confederate Street
    • Stonewall Street
  • Holliday: Stonewall Road
  • Houston:
    • Robert E. Lee Road – now Unison Road.
    • Robert Lee Road
    • Sul Ross St, Named for Lawrence Sullivan Ross, Confederate general and former president of Texas A&M University.
    • Tuam Street, a major artery named for CSA Gen. Dowling's birthplace, Tuam, Ireland.
  • Hunt: Robert E. Lee Road
  • Jacksonville: Jeff Davis Street
  • Kermit East Winkler Street
  • Lakeside Confederate Park Road
  • League City: Jeb Stuart Drive
  • Levelland: Robert Lee Street
  • Liberty: Confederate Street
  • Livingston: Robert E. Lee Road
  • Marshall:
    • Jeff Davis Street
    • Stonewall Drive
  • Missouri City
    • Beauregard Court
    • Bedford Forrest Drive
    • Breckinridge Court
    • Confederate Drive
    • Pickett Place
  • Richmond:
    • Jeb Stuart Drive
    • Jeff Davis Drive
    • Stonewall Drive
  • Ridgley: Bedford Forrest Lane
  • Roma: Robert Lee Avenue
  • San Antonio:
    • Beauregard Street
    • Robert E. Lee Drive
  • Sterling City: Robert Lee Highway
  • Sweetwater: Robert Lee Street
  • Tyler:
    • Jeb Stuart Drive
    • Jeff Davis Drive
  • Victoria: Robert E. Lee Road

Note: "There are similarly named streets in towns and cities across east Texas, notably Port Arthur and Beaumont, as well as memorials to Dowling and the Davis Guards, not least at Sabine Pass, where the battleground is now preserved as a state park"

Schools edit

 
Stonewall Jackson Elementary School, Dallas
  • Dallas:
    • Albert Sidney Johnston Elementary School – now Cedar Crest Elementary School.
    • John H. Reagan Elementary School – now Bishop Arts STEAM Academy.
    • Robert E. Lee Elementary School – now Geneva Heights Elementary School.
    • Stonewall Jackson Elementary School (1939) – now Mockingbird Elementary School.
    • Sidney Lanier Expressive Arts Vanguard Elementary School – now Jesús Moroles Expressive Arts Vanguard Elementary School.
  • Denton: Lee Elementary School (1988), renamed Alice Moore Alexander Elementary School in 2017[95]
  • Eagle Pass: Robert E. Lee Elementary School – now Juan N. Seguin Elementary School.
  • Edinburg: Lee Elementary School[95]
  • El Paso: Lee Elementary School[95] -now Sunrise Mountain Elementary School.
  • Evadale: Evadale High School. The school uses a Confederate flag-inspired crest. Its athletic teams are nicknamed the "Rebels".[534]
  • Fort Davis:
  • Gainesville: Robert E. Lee Intermediate School – now Gainesville Intermediate School.
  • Grand Prairie: Robert E. Lee Elementary School (1948) -now Delmas F. Morton Elementary School.
  • Houston:
    • Davis High School (1926). In 2016, the Houston school board voted to rename the school.[535] -now Northside High School.
    • Dowling Middle School (1968), named for CSA Maj. Richard W. Dowling. In 2016, the Houston school board voted to rename the school.[535] -now Audrey H. Lawson Middle School.
    • Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson Middle School to Yolanda Black Navarro Middle School of Excellence.
    • Sydney Lanier, Confederate poet and soldier. In 2016, the Houston school board voted to rename the school.

confederate, monuments, memorials, contents, history, monument, building, dedications, crow, scholarly, study, monument, movement, vandalism, removal, geographic, distribution, national, united, states, capitol, arlington, national, cemetery, coins, stamps, mi. Contents 1 History 1 1 Monument building and dedications 1 2 Jim Crow 1 3 Scholarly study 2 The Monument Movement 2 1 Vandalism 2 2 Removal 3 Geographic distribution 4 National 4 1 United States Capitol 4 2 Arlington National Cemetery 4 3 Coins and stamps 4 4 US military 4 4 1 Bases 4 4 2 Facilities 4 4 3 Current ships 4 4 4 Former ships 5 Multi state highways 6 Alabama 7 Alaska 8 Arizona 9 Arkansas 9 1 State capitol 9 2 Monuments 9 2 1 Courthouse monuments 9 2 2 Other public monuments 9 3 Inhabited places 9 4 Parks 9 5 Roads 9 6 Schools 9 7 State symbols 10 California 10 1 Inhabited places 10 2 Roads 10 3 Schools 10 4 Mountains and recreation 10 5 Mine 11 Colorado 11 1 Schools 11 2 Monument 11 3 Mine 12 Delaware 13 District of Columbia 14 Florida 14 1 State capitol 14 2 State symbol 14 3 State holiday 14 4 Monuments 14 4 1 Courthouse monuments 14 4 2 Other public monuments 14 4 3 Private monuments 14 5 Inhabited places 14 5 1 Counties 14 5 2 Municipalities 14 6 Parks 14 7 Roads 14 8 Schools and libraries 14 9 City symbols 14 10 City holiday 14 11 County holiday 15 Georgia 16 Hawaii 17 Idaho 17 1 Inhabited places 17 2 Natural features and recreation 18 Illinois 18 1 Federal cemeteries 18 2 Federal plot within private cemetery 19 Indiana 20 Iowa 21 Kansas 22 Kentucky 22 1 Monuments 22 2 Bridge 22 3 Inhabited places 22 4 Parks 22 5 Roads 22 6 Highways 22 7 Schools 23 Louisiana 23 1 State capitol 23 2 Buildings 23 3 Monuments 23 3 1 Courthouse monuments 23 3 2 Other public monuments 23 4 Inhabited places 23 5 Parks 23 6 Roads 23 7 Schools 23 8 Confederate flag display 24 Maryland 24 1 State symbols 24 2 Monuments 24 2 1 Public monuments 24 2 2 Private monuments 24 3 Inhabited places 24 4 Roads 24 5 Ferry 24 6 Gallery 25 Massachusetts 25 1 Private memorials 26 Michigan 27 Minnesota 28 Mississippi 29 Missouri 29 1 Monuments 29 1 1 Courthouse monuments 29 1 2 Other public monuments 29 2 Inhabited places 29 3 Parks 29 4 Roads 29 5 Schools 30 Montana 31 Nevada 32 New Jersey 33 New Mexico 34 New York 34 1 Monuments 34 1 1 Public monuments 34 1 2 Private monuments 34 2 Roads 35 North Carolina 36 Ohio 36 1 Historical marker 36 2 Monuments 36 3 Inhabited places 36 4 Roads 36 5 Schools 37 Oklahoma 37 1 Buildings 37 2 Monuments 37 3 Schools 37 4 Inhabited places 37 5 Roads 38 Oregon 39 Pennsylvania 39 1 Monuments 39 2 Roads 40 Rhode Island 41 South Carolina 42 South Dakota 43 Tennessee 43 1 State capitol 43 2 Buildings 43 3 Monuments 43 3 1 Courthouse monuments 43 3 2 Other public monuments 43 3 3 Private monuments 43 4 Inhabited place 43 5 Parks 43 6 Roads 43 7 Schools 43 8 Tourist sites 44 Texas 44 1 State capitol 44 2 State symbols 44 3 State holiday 44 4 Buildings 44 5 Monuments 44 5 1 Courthouse monuments 44 5 2 Other public monuments 44 5 3 Private monuments 44 6 Inhabited places 44 6 1 Counties 44 6 2 Municipalities 44 7 Museums 44 8 Parks 44 9 Roads 44 10 Schools 44 11 Other memorials 45 Utah 46 Vermont 47 Virginia 48 Washington State 49 West Virginia 49 1 State capitol 49 2 Monuments 49 3 Inhabited places 49 4 Parks and water features 49 5 Roads 49 6 Schools 50 Wisconsin 51 Wyoming 51 1 Natural features 52 International 52 1 Brazil 52 2 Canada 52 3 Ireland 52 4 Scotland 53 See also 54 Notes 55 References 56 Further reading 57 External links Confederate monuments and memorials in the United States include public displays and symbols of the Confederate States of America CSA Confederate leaders or Confederate soldiers of the American Civil War Many monuments and memorials have been or will be removed under great controversy Part of the commemoration of the American Civil War these symbols include monuments and statues flags holidays and other observances and the names of schools roads parks bridges buildings counties cities lakes dams military bases and other public structures a In a December 2018 special report Smithsonian Magazine stated over the past ten years taxpayers have directed at least 40 million to Confederate monuments statues homes parks museums libraries and cemeteries and to Confederate heritage organizations 2 This entry does not include commemorations of pre Civil War figures connected with the origins of the Civil War or white supremacy but not directly tied to the Confederacy such as Supreme Court Justice Roger B Taney pro slavery congressman Preston Brooks North Carolina Chief Justice Thomas Ruffin 3 or Southern politician John C Calhoun although Calhoun was venerated by the Confederacy and post war segregationists and monuments to Calhoun have been the most consistent targets of vandals 4 It also does not include post Civil War white supremacists such as North Carolina Governor Charles Aycock and Mississippi Governor James K Vardaman Monuments and memorials are listed alphabetically by state and by city within each state States not listed have no known qualifying items for the list 5 History editMonument building and dedications edit Memorials have been erected on public spaces including on courthouse grounds either at public expense or funded by private organizations and donors Numerous private memorials have also been erected nbsp Chart of public symbols of the Confederacy and its leaders as surveyed by the Southern Poverty Law Center SPLC by year of establishment Most of these were put up either during the Jim Crow era or during the Civil Rights Movement b These two periods also coincided with the 50th and 100th anniversaries of the Civil War c 6 According to Smithsonian Magazine Confederate monuments aren t just heirlooms the artifacts of a bygone era Instead American taxpayers are still heavily investing in these tributes today 2 The report also concluded that the monuments were constructed and are regularly maintained in promotion of the Lost Cause white supremacist mythology and over the many decades of their establishment African American leaders regularly protested these memorials and what they represented 2 A small number of memorializations were made during the war mainly as ship and place names After the war Robert E Lee said on several occasions that he was opposed to any monuments as they would in his opinion keep open the sores of war 7 8 Nevertheless monuments and memorials continued to be dedicated shortly after the American Civil War 9 1 Before 1890 most were erected in cemeteries as memorials to soldiers who died in the war 10 Many more monuments were dedicated in the years after 1890 when Congress established the first National Military Park at Chickamauga and Chattanooga and by the turn of the 20th century five battlefields from the Civil War had been preserved Chickamauga Chattanooga Antietam Gettysburg Shiloh and Vicksburg At Vicksburg National Military Park more than 95 of the park s monuments were erected in the first eighteen years after the park was established in 1899 11 But monuments began appearing in public places with the emergence of the Jim Crow South 10 Jim Crow edit See also Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia Confederate monument building has often been part of widespread campaigns to promote and justify Jim Crow laws in the South 12 1 13 According to the American Historical Association AHA the erection of Confederate monuments during the early 20th century was part and parcel of the initiation of legally mandated segregation and widespread disenfranchisement across the South According to the AHA memorials to the Confederacy erected during this period were intended in part to obscure the terrorism required to overthrow Reconstruction and to intimidate African Americans politically and isolate them from the mainstream of public life A later wave of monument building coincided with the civil rights movement and according to the AHA these symbols of white supremacy are still being invoked for similar purposes 14 According to Smithsonian Magazine far from simply being markers of historic events and people as proponents argue these memorials were created and funded by Jim Crow governments to pay homage to a slave owning society and to serve as blunt assertions of dominance over African Americans 2 nbsp Confederate Soldier Statue in Monroe County West Virginia 2016According to historian Jane Dailey from the University of Chicago in many cases the purpose of the monuments was not to celebrate the past but rather to promote a white supremacist future 15 Another historian Karen L Cox from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte has written that the monuments are a legacy of the brutally racist Jim Crow era and that the whole point of Confederate monuments is to celebrate white supremacy 13 Another historian from UNC James Leloudis stated that The funders and backers of these monuments are very explicit that they are requiring a political education and a legitimacy for the Jim Crow era and the right of white men to rule 16 They were erected without the consent or even input of Southern African Americans who remembered the Civil War far differently and who had no interest in honoring those who fought to keep them enslaved 17 According to Civil War historian Judith Giesberg professor of history at Villanova University White supremacy is really what these statues represent 18 Some monuments were also meant to beautify cities as part of the City Beautiful movement although this was secondary 19 In a June 2018 speech Civil War historian James I Robertson Jr of Virginia Tech said the monuments were not a Jim Crow signal of defiance and referred to the current trend to dismantle or destroy them as an age of idiocy motivated by elements hell bent on tearing apart unity that generations of Americans have painfully constructed 20 Katrina Dunn Johnson Curator of the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum states that thousands of families throughout the country were unable to reclaim their soldier s remains many never learned their loved ones exact fate on the battlefield or within the prison camps The psychological impact of such a devastating loss cannot be underestimated when attempting to understand the primary motivations behind Southern memorialization 21 Many Confederate monuments were dedicated in the former Confederate states and border states in the decades following the Civil War in many instances by Ladies Memorial Associations United Daughters of the Confederacy UDC United Confederate Veterans UCV Sons of Confederate Veterans SCV the Heritage Preservation Association and other memorial organizations 22 23 24 Other Confederate monuments are located on Civil War battlefields Many Confederate monuments are listed on the National Register of Historic Places either separately or as contributing objects within listings of courthouses or historic districts Art historians Cynthia Mills and Pamela Simpson argued in Monuments to the Lost Cause that the majority of Confederate monuments of the type they define were commissioned by white women in hope of preserving a positive vision of antebellum life 25 26 In the late nineteenth century technological innovations in the granite and bronze industries helped reduce costs and made monuments more affordable for small towns Companies looking to capitalize on this opportunity often sold nearly identical copies of monuments to both the North and South 27 Another wave of monument construction coincided with the Civil Rights Movement and the American Civil War Centennial 1 11 At least thirty two Confederate monuments were dedicated between 2000 and 2017 including at least 7 re dedications 28 29 30 31 Scholarly study edit Scholarly studies of the monuments began in the 1980s In 1983 John J Winberry published a study which was based on data from the work of R W Widener 32 33 He estimated that the main building period for monuments was from 1889 to 1929 and that of the monuments erected in courthouse squares over half were built between 1902 and 1912 He determined four main locations for monuments battlefields cemeteries county courthouse grounds and state capitol grounds Over a third of the courthouse monuments were dedicated to the dead The majority of the cemetery monuments in his study were built in the pre 1900 period while most of the courthouse monuments were erected after 1900 Of the 666 monuments in his study 55 were of Confederate soldiers while 28 were obelisks Soldiers dominated courthouse grounds while obelisks account for nearly half of cemetery monuments The idea that the soldier statues always faced north was found to be untrue and that the soldiers usually faced the same direction as the courthouse He noted that the monuments were remarkably diverse with only a few instances of repetition of inscriptions 33 nbsp The Confederate Memorial in Fulton Kentucky is listed on the National Register of Historic PlacesHe categorized the monuments into four types Type 1 was a Confederate soldier on a column with his weapon at parade rest or weaponless and gazing into the distance These accounted for approximately half the monuments studied They are however the most popular among the courthouse monuments Type 2 was a Confederate soldier on a column with rifle ready or carrying a flag or bugle Type 3 was an obelisk often covered with drapery and bearing cannonballs or an urn This type was 28 of the monuments studied but 48 of the monuments in cemeteries and 18 of courthouse monuments Type 4 was a miscellaneous group including arches standing stones plaques fountains etc These account for 17 of the monuments studied 33 Over a third of the courthouse monuments were specifically dedicated to the Confederate dead The first courthouse monument was erected in Bolivar Tennessee in 1867 By 1880 nine courthouse monuments had been erected Winberry noted two centers of courthouse monuments the Potomac counties of Virginia from which the tradition spread to North Carolina and a larger area covering Georgia South Carolina and northern Florida The diffusion of courthouse monuments was aided by organizations such as the United Confederate Veterans and their publications though other factors may also have been effective 33 Winberry listed four reasons for the shift from cemeteries to courthouses First was the need to preserve the memory of the Confederate dead and also recognize the veterans who returned Second was to celebrate the rebuilding of the South after the war Third was the romanticizing of the Lost Cause and the fourth was to unify the white population in a common heritage against the interests of African American Southerners He concluded No one of these four possible explanations for the Confederate monument is adequate or complete in itself The monument is a symbol but whether it was a memory of the past a celebration of the present or a portent of the future remains a difficult question to answer monuments and symbols can be complicated and sometimes indecipherable 33 The Monument Movement editThe Monument Movement was a national movement of the late 19th and early 20th century The Union and Confederate monuments were erected as community memorials In the North and South communities came together in the time of war contributing their men and boys and a few documented women then they came together again to memorialize these soldiers and their contributions to the cause as they saw it Citizens paid subscriptions to memorials for monument associations taxes were issued the GAR Allied Orders the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the United Confederate Veterans all lead fundraisers 34 The monument to Confederate Colonel Francis S Bartow was erected after First Manassas but was destroyed before or during Second Manassas The other early monuments were Union monuments at Battle of Rowlett s Station in Munfordville Kentucky in January 1862 for the men of the 32nd Indiana killed It was removed for its own protection from the elements in 2008 35 Other early Union monuments before the war ended were the Hazen Brigade Monument in Murfreesboro and the 1865 Ladd and Whitney Monument in Lowell Massachusetts 36 37 38 The Northern memorials recorded in the survey work to date lists 11 monuments erected before 1866 including the previously mentioned monuments Another ten monuments were documented in 1866 and 11 more in 1867 by the time the first post war Confederate monuments were erected in Romney Hampshire County West Virginia and Chester Chester County South Carolina in 1867 34 nbsp Blevins Forever in Mourning Chart of Union and Confederate Monuments 1860 1920In addition to monuments to the Union and Confederate honorees the Monument Movement saw the placement of Revolutionary War Monuments for the 100th of the American Revolution from 1876 to 1883 In the W H Mullins Company catalog The Blue and the Gray it notes with Union and Confederate Monuments the company s recent installments of monuments for the Revolutionary War at Guilford Courthouse North Carolina 39 Vandalism edit As of June 19 over 12 Confederate monuments had been vandalized in 2019 usually with paint 40 41 needs update Removal edit Main article Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials nbsp The Confederate Monument to Robert E Lee is removed from its pedestal in Lee Circle in New Orleans on May 17 2017As of April 2017 update at least 60 symbols of the Confederacy had been removed or renamed since 2015 according to the Southern Poverty Law Center SPLC 42 At the same time laws in various Southern states place restrictions on or prohibit altogether the removal of statues and memorials and the renaming of parks roads and schools 43 44 45 46 47 A 2017 Reuters poll found that 54 of adults stated that the monuments should remain in all public spaces and 27 said they should be removed while 19 said they were unsure The results were split along racial and political lines with whites and Republicans preferring to keep the monuments in place while blacks and Democrats were more likely to support their removal 48 49 A similar 2017 poll by HuffPost YouGov found that one third of respondents favored removal while 49 were opposed 50 51 Support for removal increased during the George Floyd protests with 52 in favor of removal and 44 opposed 52 53 Time period Number of removals 54 1865 2009 22009 2014 32015 after Charleston church shooting 42016 42017 year of the Charlottesville car attack 362018 82019 42020 after murder of George Floyd 94 55 2021 16 56 Geographic distribution editConfederate monuments are widely distributed across the southern United States 33 The distribution pattern follows the general political boundaries of the Confederacy 33 Of the more than 1503 public monuments and memorials to the Confederacy more than 718 are monuments and statues Nearly 300 monuments and statues are in Georgia Virginia or North Carolina The northern states that remained part of the Union and the western states that were largely settled after the Civil War have few or no memorials to the Confederacy National editSee also Civil War commemoration stamps and CSA affinity license plates United States Capitol edit Main article Confederate artworks in the United States Capitol nbsp There are seven Confederate figures in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol In the National Statuary Hall Collection housed inside the United States Capitol each state has provided statues of two citizens that the state wants to honor Seven Confederate figures are among them with one pending removal and replacement The dates listed below reflect when each statue was given to the collection 57 58 Zebulon Baird Vance North Carolina 1916 59 Uriah M Rose Arkansas 1917 60 In 2019 the Arkansas legislature voted to replace both of its contributions to the collection the statue of Rose and one of James Paul Clarke 61 As of January 2023 replacement statues of Daisy Bates and Johnny Cash are being prepared for installation 62 Joseph Wheeler Alabama 1925 63 Alexander Hamilton Stephens Georgia 1927 64 Wade Hampton III South Carolina 1929 65 Jefferson Davis Mississippi 1931 66 James Zachariah George Mississippi 1931 67 In addition to these pieces three additional sculptures of Confederate figures have been removed since the turn of the 21st century Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry Alabama 1908 was removed and replaced by a statue of Helen Keller in 2009 68 Robert E Lee Virginia 1909 was removed in 2020 69 In January 2023 the design of a replacement statue of Barbara Rose Johns was revealed At the time sculptor Steven Weitzman stated that the statue would be ready for installation sometime in 2024 69 Edmund Kirby Smith Florida 1922 was removed in 2021 and replaced by a statue of Mary McLeod Bethune in 2022 70 Arlington National Cemetery edit Main article List of memorials and monuments at Arlington National Cemetery nbsp Confederate Memorial Arlington National CemeteryThe antebellum home of Robert E Lee during the Civil War Arlington House in Arlington County Virginia overlooks Arlington National Cemetery A National Park Service NPS memorial the estate became the site of Arlington National Cemetery in part to ensure that Lee could never live there 71 The NPS describes the property as the nation s memorial to Robert E Lee It honors him for specific reasons including his role in promoting peace and reunion after the Civil War In a larger sense it exists as a place of study and contemplation of the meaning of some of the most difficult aspects of American History military service sacrifice citizenship duty loyalty slavery and freedom 72 The Confederate Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery was a project of the United Daughters of the Confederacy authorized in 1906 by the United States Secretary of War William Howard Taft and unveiled by President Wilson in 1914 73 The memorial was removed in December 2023 74 Coins and stamps edit See also Commemoration of the American Civil War on postage stamps Robert E Lee and Stonewall Jackson were portrayed by the US Mint on the 1925 Commemorative silver US half dollar along with the words Stone Mountain The coin was a fundraiser for the Stone Mountain monument which honors the Confederate Generals The authorized issue was 5 million coins to be sold at 1 each but that proved overly optimistic and only 1 3 million coins were released many of which ended up in circulation after being spent for face value 75 The caption on the reverse reads Memorial to the valor of the soldier of the South Robert E Lee has been commemorated on at least five US postage stamps One 1936 37 stamp featured Generals Lee and Stonewall Jackson with Lee s home Stratford Hall 76 US military edit Bases edit See also List of U S Army installations named for Confederate soldiers Prior to 2023 there were nine major U S military bases named in honor of Confederate military leaders all in former Confederate states 1 Following nationwide protests over the murder of George Floyd by a police officer the United States Congress in 2021 created The Naming Commission in order to rename military assets with names associated with the Confederacy 77 The United States Secretary of Defense was required to implement a plan developed by the commission and to remove all names symbols displays monuments and paraphernalia that honor or commemorate the Confederate States of America or any person who served voluntarily with the Confederate States of America from all assets of the Department of Defense within three years of the commission s creation 78 79 By October 2023 all nine bases had officially been redesignated under new names proposed by the commission Fort A P Hill 1941 near Bowling Green Virginia named for Confederate General A P Hill was redesignated Fort Walker on 25 August 2023 in honor of Medal of Honor recipient and civilian army surgeon Dr Mary Edwards Walker 80 81 Fort Benning 1917 near Columbus Georgia named for Confederate General Henry L Benning was redesignated Fort Moore on 11 May 2023 in honor of General Hal Moore and his wife Julia Compton Moore 82 Fort Bragg 1918 in North Carolina named for Confederate General Braxton Bragg was redesignated Fort Liberty on 2 June 2023 in honor of Liberty 83 Fort Gordon 1917 near Augusta Georgia named for Confederate General John Brown Gordon was redesignated as Fort Eisenhower on 27 October 2023 in honor of president Dwight D Eisenhower 80 84 Fort Hood 1942 in Killeen Texas formerly named after Confederate General John Bell Hood was redesignated Fort Cavazos on 9 May 2023 in honor of General Richard Cavazos 85 Fort Lee 1917 in Prince George County Virginia named after Confederate General Robert E Lee was redesignated Fort Gregg Adams on 27 April 2023 in honor of Lieutenant General Arthur J Gregg and Lieutenant Colonel Charity Adams 86 Fort Pickett 1942 near Blackstone Virginia a Virginia National Guard installation named for Confederate General George Pickett was redesignated Fort Barfoot on 24 March 2023 in honor of Medal of Honor recipient Colonel Van T Barfoot 87 Fort Polk 1941 near Leesville Louisiana named for Episcopal bishop and Confederate General Leonidas Polk was redesignated Fort Johnson on 13 June 2023 in honor of Medal of Honor recipient Sergeant William Henry Johnson 80 88 Fort Rucker 1942 in Dale County Alabama named for Confederate Colonel Edmund Rucker was redesignated Fort Novosel on 10 April 2023 in honor of Medal of Honor recipient Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael J Novosel 89 Facilities edit Lee Barracks named for CSA Gen Robert E Lee 1962 at U S Military Academy at West Point New York 90 U S Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland Buchanan House the Naval Academy superintendent s home named for CSA naval officer Franklin Buchanan 91 A road near the house is also memorialized in Buchanan s name Maury Hall home to the academy s division of Weapons and Systems Engineering named for US naval officer in charge of the Depot of Charts and Instruments at Washington and later CSA naval officer Matthew Fontaine Maury 91 92 Current ships edit USNS Maury T AGS 66 2013 Former ships edit See also List of ships of the Confederate States Navy USS Atchison County LST 60 named for counties in Kansas and Missouri established in honor of Brigadier General David Rice Atchison USS Brooke FFG 1 frigate named after Confederate marine engineer John Mercer Brooke USS Buchanan Three U S Navy destroyers have been named in honor of the highest ranked Confederate Admiral Franklin Buchanan USS Buchanan DD 131 1919 1940 then transferred to UK Navy USS Buchanan DD 484 1941 1949 then transferred to Turkey s Navy USS Buchanan DDG 14 1960 1991 then sank as target in 2000 USS Dixon AS 37 Submarine tender named after Confederate submarine commander George E Dixon USS Hunley AS 31 Submarine tender named after Confederate marine engineer Horace Lawson Hunley USS Maury 5 former ships have carried the Maury name dating from WWI and WWII USS Robert E Lee SSBN 601 ballistic missile submarine in honor of Gen Robert E Lee USS Richard L Page FFG 5 frigate named after Confederate General Richard Lucian Page USS Semmes two destroyers have been named for Raphael Semmes USS Semmes DD 189 1920 1946 USS Semmes DDG 18 1962 1991 USS Stonewall Jackson SSBN 634 1964 1995 USS Tattnall DDG 19 destroyer named after Confederate Commodore Josiah Tattnall III USS Tom Green County LST 1159 1953 1972 then transferred to Spain The namesake Texas County was named for CSA Brig Gen Thomas Green USS Waddell DDG 24 destroyer named after Confederate Captain James Iredell Waddell SS Zebulon B Vance a World War II liberty ship named for CSA Colonel and North Carolina Confederate governor Zebulon Baird Vance Liberty Ship 113 named for Joseph E Johnston by the US Navy 93 Liberty ship 5 named for Alexander H Stephens Liberty ship 8 named for Jefferson DavisSeveral ships named for Confederate leaders fell into Union hands during the Civil War The Union Navy retained the names of these ships while turning their guns against the Confederacy Beauregard a privateer with letters of marque issued by the Confederacy named in honor of Gen P G T Beauregard Captured as a prize and purchased on February 24 1862 by the Union Navy which operated it as the USS Beauregard USS General Price 1862 a Confederate ship sunk in battle raised and used by the Union until sold in 1865 Multi state highways editJefferson Davis Highway Arlington Virginia to San Diego California The highway labeling no road construction was involved was a project of the United Daughters of the Confederacy Never completed as originally planned and its route is not completely clear Markers that remain are listed under the states On October 16 2018 the Board of Commissioners of Orange County North Carolina location of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill see Silent Sam voted unanimously to repeal the county s 1959 resolution naming for Davis the portion of U S 15 running through the county 94 Lee Highway New York City to San Francisco Markers that remain are listed under the states Alabama editMain article List of Confederate monuments and memorials in Alabama As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 122 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Alabama 95 Alaska editYukon Koyukuk Census Area Confederate Gulch 96 and Union Gulch both drain the side of a mineralized mountain mass northeast of Wiseman Gold was discovered in both gulches in the early 20th century though only Union Gulch was mined 97 Arizona editAs of 20 August 2020 update only two Confederate related plaques on public property remain in Phoenix and Sierra Vista Arizona 95 Further information Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Arizona Type of monument Date Location Details ImagePublic 2010 Sierra Vista Confederate Memorial Historical Soldiers Memorial Cemetery area of the state owned Southern Arizona Veterans Memorial Cemetery The monument was erected in to honor the 21 soldiers interred in that cemetery who served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War and later fought in Indian wars in Arizona as members of the U S Army 98 99 Private 1999 Phoenix Arizona Confederate Veterans Monument at Greenwood Memory Lawn Cemetery erected by SCV 98 nbsp Public 1961 2020 Phoenix Memorial to Arizona Confederate Troops in Wesley Bolin Park next to the Arizona State Capitol UDC memorial 98 nbsp Road 1943 2020 Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway marker 50 mi 80 km east of Phoenix erected by UDC Tarred and feathered in August 2017 98 100 Public 1984 2015 Picacho Peak State Park A commemorative sign and a plaque commemorated the Battle of Picacho Pass the westernmost Confederate engagement of the war The sign is dedicated to Capt Sherod Hunter s Arizona Rangers Arizona Volunteers C S A while the plaque states three Union soldiers buried on battlefield and includes both US Union and CSA flags The sign was removed in 2015 due to deterioration of the wood and the plaque was moved onto the Union stone monument 98 101 102 nbsp Arkansas editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Arkansas As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 65 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Arkansas 95 State capitol edit Confederate Soldiers Monument also known as Defense of the Flag Arkansas State Capitol grounds 1905 103 Confederate War Prisoners Memorial Arkansas State Capitol grounds 103 Monument to Confederate Women or Mother of the South Arkansas State Capitol grounds Little Rock Arkansas Statue depicts a mother and daughter saying good bye to their 16 year old son and brother who is leaving to join his father in the fighting 1913 104 105 Old State House several on the grounds 106 David O Dodd Memorial 1923 Defenders Memorial Plaque 1932 107 Gen Thomas J Churchill Memorial 1928 Gen William Read Scurry Memorial 1928 Old State House Confederate Memorial 108 Monuments edit nbsp Van Buren Confederate Monument at Crawford County Courthouse in Van Buren ArkansasCourthouse monuments edit Arkadelphia Arkadelphia Confederate Monument 1911 Blytheville Confederate War Memorial 1934 Camden Camden Confederate Monument 1915 Conway Conway Confederate Monument 1925 El Dorado El Dorado Confederate Monument 1909 Fort Smith Ft Smith Confederate Monument 1903 Lake Village Lake Village Confederate Monument 1910 Lonoke Lonoke Confederate Monument 1910 Marion Crittenden County Civil War Memorial 1936 Osceola Searcy Confederate Monument 1917 104 Van Buren Van Buren Confederate Monument 1899 Other public monuments edit See also Camp Nelson Confederate Cemetery and Prairie Grove Battlefield State Park nbsp Bentonville Confederate Monument nbsp Confederate Statue Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery nbsp Confederate Soldiers Monument Little Rock National Cemetery nbsp Little Rock Confederate Memorial Little Rock National Cemetery nbsp Robert E Lee Monument in Marianna nbsp Star City Confederate MemorialBatesville Batesville Confederate Monument 1907 Benton Confederate Veterans Memorial Bentonville Bentonville Confederate Monument 1908 UDC monument 109 Camden Granite obelisk topped by a cannonball in fenced off Confederate section of Oakland Cemetery Clarendon Confederate Memorial Clarksville Clarksville Confederate Monument 1902 The Oakland Cemetery obelisk inscribed Sacred to the memory of our Confederate dead was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 110 Dardanelle Dardanelle Confederate Monument 1921 Fayetteville Confederate statue 1897 Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery 111 Fort Smith Jefferson Davis Memorial 1937 Grant County UDC monument 1928 at Jenkins Ferry Battleground State Park to Confederate soldiers who died at the Battle of Jenkins Ferry 112 Harrison Boone County Confederate Veterans Memorial on the grounds of the Boone County Courthouse 1986 Hot Springs Confederate State Capital Bathhouse Row Hot Springs Confederate Monument 1934 Jacksonport Jackson County Confederate Memorial 1914 Little Rock Children of the Confederacy Confederate Bench 1936 Confederate Last Stand Monument CSS Pontchartrain citation needed Little Rock National Cemetery Confederate Soldiers Monument 1884 marks the mass burial of 640 Confederate soldiers 113 Little Rock Confederate Memorial 1913 114 Memorial to Company A Confederate Soldiers 1911 Monument to Confederate Soldiers 1905 Southern Soldiers Memorial Magnolia Gen John Porter McCown Monument Marianna Gen Robert E Lee Monument 1910 Marmaduke John Sappington Marmaduke Memorial Monticello Monticello Confederate Monument New Edinburg Captain Richard Tunball Banks Monument 1864 Newport Jackson Guards Memorial built in 1914 Monument consists of a statue of a single Confederate soldier and a roster of the men who served in the Jackson Guards and the slaves who supported them The only Confederate monument in Arkansas built entirely with funds raised by private subscription although it was built on a prominent piece of land donated by the city of Hot Springs 104 Pea Ridge Confederate Generals Memorial 1887 115 Reunited Soldiery Monument 1889 one of the first to honor both Confederate and Union soldiers to be placed on a battlefield 116 Texas Memorial Pea Ridge City Park 1964 117 Pine Bluff David O Dodd Memorial Pine Bluff Confederate Monument 1910 Prescott Confederate War Memorial 1964 Smithville Confederate War Memorial 1996 118 Star City Star City Confederate Memorial 1926 Erected on the courthouse grounds moved in 1943 and moved again to its original position now the town square in the 1990s Consists of a statue of a Confederate soldier 104 Van Buren Confederate Memorial 1906 Originally at Fairview Cemetery Fairview Cemetery Confederate Memorial replacement when original was moved to downtown 119 Washington Confederate Masonic Memorial Washington Confederate Monument 1888 Washington Presbyterian Cemetery Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996 120 121 Inhabited places edit Cleburne County 1883 named for CSA Maj Gen Patrick Cleburne 122 Faulkner County 1873 named for CSA Capt Sandford C Faulkner 123 City of Forrest City 1870 named for CSA Gen Nathan Bedford Forrest 124 Lee County 1873 named for CSA Gen Robert E Lee 125 Parks edit Russellville Confederate Mothers Memorial Park 1921 Land for the public park was donated by UDC and includes three stone monuments each one placed by a different Confederate veterans or memorial organization honoring the mothers of the Confederacy 126 Roads edit El Dorado Robert E Lee Street Forrest City Confederate Drive Heber Springs Jefferson Davis Road Hughes Jeff Davis Street Jacksonville Jeff Davis Avenue Lake Village Confederate Street Little Rock Beauregard Drive Claiborne Drive Longstreet Drive Pickett Drive Malvern Robert E Lee Street Wilson Jeb Stuart DriveSchools edit Forrest City Forrest City High School 1914 Forrest City Junior High School Little Rock Robert E Lee School Pine Bluff Forrest Park Prep Preschool Springdale Robert E Lee Elementary School 1951 State symbols edit nbsp Flag of Arkansas since 1913Flag of Arkansas The blue star above ARKANSAS represents the Confederate States of America and is placed above the three other stars for the countries Spain France and the US to which the State belonged before statehood The diamond represents the nations only diamond mine with bordering 25 stars symbolizing 25th state to join 127 The design of the border around the white diamond evokes the saltire found on the Confederate battle flag 128 California editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials California As of 23 July 2020 update there were at least four public spaces with Confederate monuments in California 95 Inhabited places edit Confederate Corners crossroads near Salinas in Monterey County fictionalized as Rebel Corners in John Steinbeck s novel The Wayward Bus In 2018 name officially changed to Springtown California which it had been known by prior to becoming Confederate Corners 129 Roads edit Los Angeles Johnston Street in Lincoln Heights named for CSA Gen Albert Sidney Johnston 95 There are at least four remaining markers of the Jefferson Davis Highway in the state of California including the following 95 130 Bakersfield in Pioneer Village 1942 rededicated 1968 Hornbrook 1944 Winterhaven at Fort YumaSchools edit Anaheim Savanna High School 1961 mascot has always been Johnny Rebel and a fiberglass statue of a Confederate soldier stood in the courtyard from 1964 until 2009 131 when it was removed due to deterioration The school colors are red and grey and the school fields the Savanna Mighty Marching Rebel Band and Color Guard Mountains and recreation edit Alabama Hills named for CSS Alabama 132 Jeff Davis Peak Elevation 9065 ft 2763 m 36 38 13 N 119 53 49 W 36 637 N 119 897 W 36 637 119 897 in the Mokelumne Wilderness 133 mapped by the USGS in 1889 however it may have long been used locally as many of the inhabitants of nearby Summit City now abandoned in the late 1860s were Confederate sympathizers during the civil war Jefferson Davis 1809 89 was president of the Confederacy 1861 65 134 Pickett Peak named for Confederate General George Pickett Elevation 9118 ft 2779 m 38 45 22 N 119 54 11 W 38 756 N 119 903 W 38 756 119 903 in National Forest near the Mokelumne Wilderness 135 Fortuna Pickett Peak Campground operated by the National Forest Service 136 The Robert E Lee giant sequoia in Kings Canyon National Park run by the National Park Service Mine edit nbsp Stonewall Jackson Mine San Diego County circa 1872San Diego County Stonewall Jackson Mine 1870 1893 the richest gold mine in southern California history 137 Colorado edit nbsp Robert E Lee Mine in Leadville Photo by William Henry Jackson Schools edit Keenesburg Weld Central Senior High School and Weld Central Middle School share the Weld Central Rebel a Civil war era soldier which used to appear with depictions of Confederate flags School teams are named Rebels 138 Monument edit Confederate monument Riverside Cemetery Denver 1973 139 Mine edit Leadville Robert E Lee Mine 1878 140 141 Delaware editAs of June 24 2020 update there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Delaware 95 Georgetown Delaware Confederate Monument a private monument built on the grounds of the Georgetown Historical Society unveiled in 2007 142 143 District of Columbia editSee also List of Confederate monuments and memorials National As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least nine public Confederate monuments in Washington D C mostly in the National Statuary Hall Collection See above 95 Albert Pike Memorial 1901 144 An outdoor statue that is owned by the National Park Service at 3rd and D Streets NW in the Judiciary Square neighborhood of Washington D C Pike was a Confederate General and leading Freemason and is dressed as a Mason in the sculpture 95 58 The statue is a portrait of Albert Pike as a Masonic leader and not as a general in the military 145 146 147 Eight D C elected officials have asked the National Park Service to remove the statue 148 On June 19 2020 protesters tore down the statue and set it on fire as part of the George Floyd protests because of Pike s association with the Confederacy Florida editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Florida As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 63 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Florida 95 An August 2017 meeting of the Florida League of Mayors was devoted to the topic of what to do with Civil War monuments 149 State capitol edit Confederate monument of Leon County on the grounds of the former Florida State Capitol the Old Capitol now a museum 150 Erected 1882 by our country women moved to current location 1923 151 State symbol edit nbsp Flag of Florida since 1900The current flag of Florida adopted by popular referendum in 1900 with minor changes in 1985 contains the St Andrew s Cross It is believed that the Cross was added in memory of and showing support for the Confederacy 152 153 154 Others instead say there is no link with the Confederacy but that the saltire recalls the Cross of Burgundy the emblem of New Spain 155 156 157 However the addition of the Cross was proposed by Governor Francis P Fleming a former Confederate soldier who was strongly committed to racial segregation State holiday edit In Florida Robert E Lee s birthday January 19 Confederate Memorial Day April 26 and Jefferson Davis s birthday June 3 are legal holidays 158 Monuments edit Courthouse monuments edit nbsp Unveiling of Confederate Monument Ocala 1908Bartow 7th Florida Infantry Regiment Monument Old Polk County Courthouse 1982 159 Brooksville Confederate Soldiers Memorial Hernando County Courthouse 1916 160 32 Defuniak Springs Florida s First Confederate Monument Walton County Courthouse 1871 historic marker nearby Marianna Battle of Marianna Monument Jackson County Courthouse lawn 1924 161 32 36 Confederate monument Jackson County Courthouse lawn 1881 Monticello Confederate monument Jefferson County Courthouse 1899 161 162 32 36 Ocala Confederate monument erected on the grounds of the Marion County Courthouse 1908 moved to Veterans Memorial Park and rededicated 2011 163 32 37 The Confederate flag that flew in front of the Marion County Courthouse was to be moved to elsewhere on the campus 164 Tampa The monument Memoria in Aeterna was funded by the city of Tampa and the DOC starting in 1903 and was erected in 1911 at the Hillsborough County Courthouse In 2017 it was proposed to move it to a private cemetery in Brandon Florida Other public monuments edit Crawfordville Florida Wakulla County Confederate Monument 1987 This white obelisk is located in Hudson Park It is inscribed on one side with an image of a Confederate flag and the words 1861 1865 In loving memory of those from Wakulla County who served the Confederacy during the war between the states Erected by the R Don McLeod Chapter 2469 United Daughters of the Confederacy May 17 1987 Daytona Beach Confederate Sun Dial Monument 1961 32 Originally a marble base and column topped with a sundial by the early 1980s all that remained was its base and its bronze plaque Dedicated to the Confederate dead Erected by United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1961 Plaque was removed by the City of Daytona Beach in 2017 after violent clashes in Charlottesville Virginia over their Robert E Lee monument Was to be given to Halifax Historical Museum 165 Two other bronze plaques were erected in Riverfront Park by the Sons of Confederate Veterans in 1979 and 1985 which listed the names of Confederate veterans buried in East Volusia County They were mounted on a long granite wall with other plaques commemorating various US wars They were also removed by the city in 2017 to also be given to the Halifax Historical Museum 165 Confederate Boulder Monument 1979 32 33 Dixie County American Veteran Monument Highway 98 west of Old Town dedicated to Confederate veterans c 2005 166 Jefferson County Florida Monument to Stonewall Jackson Ellenton Confederate Veterans Memorial Monument Gamble Plantation Historic State Park 1937 32 167 Judah P Benjamin Confederate Memorial at Gamble Plantation Historic State Park established 1925 pursuant to agreement between UDC and State of Florida 168 Benjamin was Attorney General then Secretary of War then Secretary of State of the Confederacy Also serves as home to Florida Division of UDC 169 Fernandina Beach Statue of David Levy Yulee 170 nbsp Yellow Bluff Fort MonumentJacksonville Confederate Park It opened in 1907 as Dignan Park named for a former chairman of the city s Board of Public Works In 1914 the park was chosen as the location of the annual reunion of the United Confederate Veterans The UCV chose the park as the location for a new monument to honor the Women of the Southland and five months after the reunion the city renamed the park Confederate Park Florida s Tribute to the Women of the Confederacy in Confederate Park 1915 The sculptor was Allen George Newman 171 Confederate monument downtown Hemming Park 1898 172 32 34 The president of Jacksonville City Council Anna Lopez Brosche called for all Confederate monuments to be moved from city property to a museum The most prominent Confederate memorial in Jacksonville is a statue of a Confederate soldier that sits atop a towering pillar in Hemming Park 173 Yellow Bluff Fort Monument Yellow Bluff Fort Historic State Park 1951 174 Key West Confederate memorial fence at Clinton Square built by J V Harris circa 1866 175 Confederate memorial pavilion at Bayview Park 1924 by UDC 176 Mallory Square named after Stephen R Mallory 177 Lake City Confederate Dead of Battle of Olustee town square in front of the Columbia County Courthouse 1928 178 nbsp United Daughters of the Confederacy members seated around a Confederate monument in Lakeland 1915Madison Confederate monument Four Freedoms Park 1909 Lists names of men who died from county Nearby sits a monument to former slaves in the county 161 32 35 Miami Confederate monument Confederate Circle in City Cemetery 1914 at the Dade County Courthouse was moved to cemetery in 1927 179 32 36 nbsp Olustee Battlefield Historic State ParkOlustee Battlefield monument Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park 1912 Inscription Here was fought on February 20 1864 the Battle of Ocean Pond under the immediate command of General Alfred Holt Colquitt Hero of Olustee This decisive engagement prevented a Sherman like invasion of Georgia from the south Erected April 20 1936 by the Alfred Holt Colquitt Chapter United Daughters of the Confederacy Ga Div CSA Brigadier General Joseph Finnegan Monument Olustee Battlefield Historic State Park 1912 Placed by The United Daughters of the Confederacy Florida Division In Memory of Brig Gen Joseph Finegan Commander of the District of Middle and East Florida So well did he perform his part that a signal victory over the Federals was won in the Battle of Olustee Feb 20 1864 Pensacola Florida Square was renamed Lee Square in 1889 180 A 50 foot monument to Our Confederate Dead erected in 1891 is in Lee Square 181 It commemorates Jefferson Davis Pensacolian Confederate veterans Stephen R Mallory Secretary of the Confederate Navy and Edward Aylesworth Perry Confederate General and Governor of Florida 1885 1889 and the Uncrowned Heroes of the Southern Confederacy The mayor of Pensacola has called for its removal 180 Perry Confederate monument Taylor County Sports Complex 2007 182 183 Quincy Confederate memorial Soldiers Cemetery within Eastern Cemetery part of the town s National Register Historic District 2010 The memorial also notes the restoration of the historic fence 184 185 St Augustine Confederate monument on the Plaza de la Constitucion 1879 186 The Confederate Memorial Contextualization Advisory Committee a seven member task force comprised mostly of historians in 2018 recommended to the City Commission that the monument be kept with the addition of some necessary context 187 St Cloud Confederate monument Veterans Park 2006 188 St Petersburg Confederate monument Greenwood Cemetery 1900 189 Tampa There is a stained glass window donated by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1906 in honor of Father Abram Ryan called Poet of the Confederacy in the Sacred Heart Catholic Church Trenton Confederate monument across from Gilchrist County Courthouse in Veterans Park 2010 190 Woodville In Loving Memory Monument Natural Bridge Battlefield Historic State Park 1922 32 37 A plaque placed at the base of the monument in 2000 lists the names of those who died as a result of the battle 191 Private monuments edit Alachua Confederate monument Newnansville Cemetery 2002 by the Alachua Lions Club 192 Bradfordville unincorporated community in Leon County Robert E Lee Monument dedicated along Highway 319 in 1927 by UDC Moved in the 1960s and 1990s it is now located about a mile south of the Georgia border 193 194 Dade City Confederate memorial Townsend House Cemetery 2010 195 Deland Confederate Veteran Memorial Oakdale Cemetery 1958 196 Kissimmee Granite obelisk in Rose Hill Cemetery dedicated to Confederate veterans buried in Osceola County with their names listed on the monument Erected 2002 by Sons of Confederate Veterans 165 Lake City Last Confederate War Widow Oaklawn Cemetery erected after her death in 1985 The memorial and the cemetery are along the Florida Civil War Heritage Trail 197 198 28 Our Confederate Dead Oaklawn Cemetery 1901 rededicated 1996 A tall obelisk in memory of the unnamed soldiers who died at the nearby Battle of Olustee or in the town s Confederate hospital The cemetery is the focal point of the opening of Lake City s annual Olustee Battle Festival 199 200 Leesburg Memorial fountain made of rustic limestone in Lone Oak Cemetery Erected 1935 by United Daughters of the Confederacy but dedicated to soldiers of all wars An adjacent 20 foot flagpole and inscribed granite block dedicated to Civil War veterans buried there was erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 2005 165 Ormond Beach 2011 Pilgrim s Rest Cemetery Monument consists of a flagpole and a concrete base with an attached bronze Southern Cross of Honor and a granite slab listing the names of Confederate veterans buried there Erected by Confederate Sons Association of Florida 165 Oxford Upright granite slab monument in Pine Level Cemetery listing the names of Confederate veterans buried in the cemetery Erected 2007 by Sons of Confederate Veterans 165 White Springs Confederate monument and large flag along Interstate 75 2002 201 Inhabited places edit Counties edit Baker County 1861 named for James McNair Baker a lawyer and judge who was a Confederate States of America Senator from Florida 202 Bradford County 1861 named for Captain Richard Bradford who was killed in the Battle of Santa Rosa Island becoming the first Confederate officer from Florida to die during the Civil War 202 Hendry County 1923 named for Francis Asbury Hendry a Confederate Captain and one of the first settlers in the area 202 Lee County 1887 named for Robert E Lee 203 Levy County 1845 named for David Levy Yulee a Florida businessman senator and strong supporter of slavery who withdrew from the U S Senate in 1861 and served nine months in prison after the Civil War for supporting the Confederacy Pasco County 1887 named for Samuel Pasco who fought for the CSA but spent much of the war as a prisoner of war Pasco later became a state representative and US Senator from Florida Municipalities edit Bartow 1862 previously Reidsville renamed for CSA Col Francis Bartow 204 Brooksville previously Pierceville took on its present name in 1856 to honor and show support for Preston Brooks a pro slavery congressman from South Carolina who caned and seriously injured Massachusetts Senator and abolitionist Charles Sumner Fort Myers previously Fort Harvie named for Abraham Myers Quartermaster General of the Confederate Army 149 Lee named for Robert E Lee Mayo named for CSA Col James Mayo 205 Perry 1875 named for Florida Governor and CSA Col Madison Starke Perry 161 Starke The origin of the name is unknown A prominent theory is that it was named in honor of Madison Starke Perry fourth governor of Florida and a Confederate States Army colonel The Division of Historical Resources of the Florida Department of State adds that the city may have been named for Thomas Starke a slaveholder who once owned much land around the area 206 Titusville 1873 previously Sand Point renamed by CSA Col Henry T Titus who also supplied Confederate troops 206 Yulee 1893 named for David Levy Yulee a supporter of slavery and secession See Levy County above Parks edit Ellenton Judah P Benjamin Confederate Memorial at Gamble Plantation Historic State Park 1925 207 Fort Walton Beach Heritage Park preserves the Confederate Camp Walton named for the county it was located in 208 Jacksonville Confederate Park opened in 1907 Originally named Dignan Park the park was renamed when UCV chose the locale as the site for their annual reunions in 1914 209 now Springfield Park Hemming Park Hemming Plaza 1899 renamed in honor of Civil War veteran Charles C Hemming after he installed a 62 foot 19 m tall Confederate monument in the park in 1898 210 211 now James Weldon Johnson Park Hemming Park station an elevated rail station taking its name from the park Now James Weldon Johnson Park Station Miami Robert E Lee Park the athletic field of Jose de Diego Middle School which replaced Robert E Lee Middle School 1924 1989 in the Wynwood neighborhood in 1999 212 A school district spokesman has said the name is not official and requested agencies with incorrect listings update them 213 Pensacola Lee Square 1889 95 now Florida Square Tampa Confederate Memorial Park opened 2008 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans Roads edit Stonewall Jackson Memorial Highway designated by UDC Chapters placed the following markers in the state Capps Along U S Route 19 in 1940 214 St Petersburg Terminus marker at the intersection of Central Avenue and Bayshore Drive in 1939 215 Removed by the city August 15 2017 216 Hilliard General Lee Road Jacksonville Confederate Point Road Confederate Street General Lee Road Naples Confederate Drive Orlando Kirby Smith Road Stonewall Jackson Road Pensacola Confederate Drive Perry North Jeff Davis Avenue St Cloud Robert Lee Road Stuart Southeast General Lee Terrace Tampa Robert E Lee Road Zephyrhills Jeff Davis Drive Jubal Early Road Schools and libraries edit Gainesville J J Finley Elementary School 1939 named for CSA Brig Gen Jesse J Finley 217 now Carolyn Beatrice Parker Elementary School Kirby Smith Center 1939 Alachua County Public Schools administrative offices Constructed in 1900 the building was initially the all white Gainesville Graded amp High School 218 In August 2017 the school board announced plans to rename the center 219 Sidney Lanier School Lanier was a Confederate soldier and poet Hillsborough County Robert E Lee Elementary School aka Lee Elementary Magnet School of World Studies and Technology was built 1906 and named for Lee in 1943 A school board member pushing for a rename in 2017 noted that had Lee s army won the war a majority of our students would be slaves 220 now Tampa Heights Elementary Magnet School Jacksonville 221 J E B Stuart Middle School 1966 named for CSA Gen J E B Stuart now Westside Middle School Jefferson Davis Middle School 1961 now Charger Academy Kirby Smith Middle School 1924 named for CSA Gen Edmund Kirby Smith now Springfield Middle School Robert E Lee High School 1928 now Riverside High School Stonewall Jackson Elementary School now Hidden Oaks Elementary School Orlando Robert E Lee Middle School renamed College Park Middle School in 2017 222 Stonewall Jackson Middle School was renamed Roberto Clemente Middle School in 2020 as was the road in front of the school Pensacola Escambia High School s Rebel mascot riots 1972 1977 Before a noncontroversial name was chosen protests and violence occurred at the school and in the community crosses were burned on school district members lawns lawsuits were filed and the Ku Klux Klan held a rally and petitioned the school board Tampa Lee Elementary School of Technology World Studies 1906 The school s mascot is Robert E Lee s horse Traveller In July 2015 students asked the school board to change the school s name 223 In June 2017 a board member asked the board to consider the name change 224 now Tampa Heights Elementary SchoolCity symbols edit Hillsborough County until 1997 the Hillsborough County seal included the Confederate Battle Flag 225 Panama City city flag is quite similar to the Florida state flag with a white background and the St Andrews cross echoing the Confederate Battle Flag but with the city seal replacing the state seal City holiday edit On April 2 2019 Ocala mayor Kent Guinn signed a declaration declaring that April 26 2019 would be Confederate Memorial Day He said he has done so in previous years 226 County holiday edit In 2016 the Commission of Marion County county seat Ocala declared April as Confederate History Month 164 Georgia editMain article List of Confederate monuments and memorials in Georgia As of June 24 2020 update there are at least 201 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Georgia 95 nbsp Confederate monument in Macon Ga on Mulberry street circa 1877Hawaii editA plaque in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific commemorates Hawaiians who fought for the Union as well as Hawaiians who fought for the Confederacy Idaho editThe settlement of Idaho coincided with the Civil War and settlers from Southern states memorialized the Confederacy with the names of several towns and natural features 227 228 229 As of June 24 2020 update there are at least three public spaces with Confederate monuments in Idaho 95 Inhabited places edit Atlanta unincorporated and its Atlanta Airport The area was named by Southerners after reports of a Confederate victory over Gen Sherman in the Battle of Atlanta which turned to be wholly false but the name stuck Confederate Gulch unincorporated former mining community 230 229 Grayback Gulch unincorporated former mining community settled by Confederate soldiers and named for the color of their uniforms Now a U S Forest Service campground 231 Leesburg an unincorporated former goldmining town settled by southerners and named for Robert E Lee 232 Natural features and recreation edit Located within Boise National Forest in Elmore County are Robert E Lee Campground 233 now dispersed 234 Robert E Lee Creek 235 Chattanooga Hot Springs near Atlanta ID 236 Secesh Successionist Summit and Secesh River 234 Illinois edit nbsp Confederate Monument at Oak Woods Cemetery in ChicagoThe four memorials in Illinois are in Federal cemeteries and connected with prisoners of war Federal cemeteries edit Alton UDC monument 1909 North Alton Confederate Cemetery Dedicated to Confederate soldiers who died at Alton Military Prison 237 As of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 Rock Island UDC obelisk 2003 Rock Island Confederate Cemetery Dedicated to Confederate soldiers who died at Rock Island Military Prison 239 Springfield UDC SCV monument 2005 Camp Butler National Cemetery Dedicated to Confederate soldiers who died at Camp Butler 240 Federal plot within private cemetery edit Chicago Confederate Mound 1895 Oak Woods Cemetery Mass grave and monument dedicated to Confederate soldiers who died at Camp Douglas 241 As of October 2018 the Veterans Administration has it under dawn to dusk guard 238 It is No 7 on the Make It Right Project s 2018 list of the 10 Confederate monuments it most wants removed 242 Indiana editAs of June 24 2020 update there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Indiana 95 nbsp Confederate monument Crown Hill National Cemetery IndianapolisMultiple locations There are 27 historical markers point of interest displays marking the route of John Hunt Morgan through Indiana 243 244 Corydon Corydon Battle Site is a memorial to both sides that fought in the Battle of Corydon the only Civil War battle in Indiana It contains Corydon s Civil War Museum 245 Evansville The Confederate monument 1904 at Oak Hill Cemetery marks the burial site of 24 Confederate prisoners who died at Evansville 246 Indianapolis Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument Garfield Park 247 erected according to its inscription to mark the burial place of 1616 Confederate soldiers and sailors who died here as prisoners of war and whose graves cannot now be identified 248 Following protests of the murder of George Floyd in June 2020 the city announced plans to remove the monument 249 A granite monument was erected in 1933 at Crown Hill National Cemetery a burial site for Confederate prisoners who died at Camp Morton 250 Terre Haute Woodlawn Monument Site 1912 Woodlawn Cemetery Erected by the Federal Government to commemorate 11 Confederate soldiers who died in a local prison camp 251 Versailles Versailles is the location of a skirmish with Morgan s Raiders South Ripley High School named their mascot the Raiders in honor of John Hunt Morgan s campaign across Indiana Iowa editAs of June 24 2020 update there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Iowa 95 Bentonsport Monument to Lawrence Sullivan Ross 2007 Iowa s only Confederate general 252 Bloomfield 252 Confederate Invasion of Iowa Monument 2005 253 Kansas editVeterans Memorial Park in Wichita Kansas holds one Confederate and Union monument a Reconciliation Memorial The intent of this memorial is to bring folks together and reconcile their differences As Confederate Monuments Come Down Across U S Wichita Memorial Comes Into Question The Memorial is a small obelisk with text honoring North and South combatants on both sides See Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Kansas for monuments which have been removed Kentucky editSee also List of Civil War Monuments of Kentucky and Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Kentucky As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 37 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Kentucky 95 Monuments edit Augusta Confederate Monument Payne Cemetery 1903 Bardstown Confederate Monument Bardstown St Joseph s Cemetery 1903 Bowling Green Confederate Monument of Bowling Green Fairview Cemetery 1876 William F Perry Monument Fairview Cemetery 1901 Brandenburg Confederate monument 2016 removed from Louisville 254 Armed protesters surrounded the monument to prevent its removal in June 2020 255 Cadiz Confederate Monument Trigg County Courthouse 1913 256 Covington Veteran s Monument Linden Grove Cemetery 1933 It was dedicated by the American Legion and honors both Confederate and Union veterans Crab Orchard Confederate Monument Crab Orchard Cemetery 1872 Cynthiana Confederate Monument Battle Grove Cemetery 1869 Danville Confederate Monument McDowell Park 1910 257 Eminence Confederate Soldiers Martyrs Monument Eminence Cemetery 1870 Fairview Confederate monument at the Jefferson Davis Monument State Historic Site a state park commemorating Davis s birthplace completed in 1924 It contains a 35 story obelisk 258 Frankfort Confederate Monument Frankfort Cemetery 1892 Fulton Confederate Monument Fairview Cemetery 1902 nbsp Confederate Monument GeorgetownGeorgetown Confederate Monument Georgetown Cemetery 1888 259 Graves County Camp Beauregard Memorial 1909 Camp Beauregard Cemetery UDC memorial to Confederate soldiers who died at Camp Beauregard for the Confederate State of America and were denied the glory of heroic service in a battle 260 Glasgow Confederate Monument Barren County Courthouse 1905 nbsp Confederate Monument Spring Hill Cemetery HarrodsburgHarrodsburg Confederate Monument Spring Hill Cemetery 1902 Hickman Confederate Memorial Gateway Hickman City Cemetery 1913 Hopkinsville Confederate Memorial Fountain Christian County Courthouse 1911 Latham Confederate Monument Riverside Cemetery 1887 Horse Cave Unknown Confederate Soldier Monument Old Dixie Highway 1934 Jeffersontown Confederate Martyrs Monument Jeffersontown City Cemetery 1904 Lawrenceburg Confederate Monument Anderson County Courthouse 1894 Lexington Ladies Confederate Memorial Lexington Cemetery 1874 Confederate Soldier Monument in Lexington Lexington Cemetery 1893 John C Breckinridge Memorial moved from Courthouse to Lexington Cemetery Oct 2017 261 John Hunt Morgan Memorial moved from Courthouse to Lexington Cemetery October 2017 261 nbsp John B Castleman Monument LouisvilleLouisville Confederate Monument dedicated in 1895 and was placed next to the University of Louisville on city property It was removed and re located to a riverfront park in Brandenburg Kentucky in December 2016 262 Madisonville Confederate Monument Hopkins County Courthouse 1909 263 Mayfield Confederate Monument Graves County Courthouse 1920 Confederate Monument Maplewood Cemetery 1924 Maysville plaque commemorating Albert Sidney Johnston 264 Midway Martyrs Monument Midway City Cemetery 1890 Morganfield Confederate Monument City Cemetery Odd Fellows Cemetery 1870 Morgantown Confederate Union Veterans Monument Butler County Courthouse 1907 Mt Sterling Confederate Monument Machpelan Cemetery 1880 Munfordville Colonel Robert A Smith Monument near the Green River 1885 Murray Confederate Monument Calloway County Courthouse 1917 Nancy General Felix K Zollicoffer Monument Zollicoffer Park Mill Springs Battlefield 1910 Nancy Confederate Mass Grave Monument Zollicoffer Park Mill Springs Battlefield 1910 Nicholasville Confederate Memorial Jessamine County Courthouse 1896 265 Owensboro Confederate Monument Daviess County Courthouse 1900 Owingsville Confederate Monument Owingsville Cemetery 1907 nbsp Lloyd Tilghman Statue PaducahPaducah Confederate Monument Oak Grove Cemetery 1907 266 First Confederate Volunteer From Paducah marker embedded in city sidewalk 266 General Lloyd Tilghman Statue Lang Park 1909 266 Paris Bourbon County Confederate Monument Paris Cemetery 1887 Perryville Confederate Monument Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site 1902 Commissioned by the state of Kentucky 267 Unknown Confederate Dead Monument Goodknight Cemetery 1928 267 Pewee Valley Pewee Valley Confederate Monument Pewee Valley Confederate Cemetery 1904 Princeton Confederate Soldier Monument Caldwell County Courthouse 1912 268 Russellville Confederate Monument Town Square 1910 Shepherdsville John Hunt Morgan s Raid Historical Markers 269 d Somerset Battle of Dutton s Hill Monument 1875 on private property Old Crab Orchard Road 271 Kentucky Historical Marker at roadside e Springfield John Hunt Morgan s Raids Historical Marker 272 f St Joseph Thompson and Powell Martyrs Monument St Alphonsus Catholic Church Cemetery 1880 273 Versailles Confederate Monument Versailles Cemetery 1877 Winchester John Hunt Morgan Historical Marker 274 g Bridge edit Cynthiana The John Hunt Morgan Bridge on South Main St U S 27 is named for a Confederate general Inhabited places edit Breckinridge Center a census designated place in Union County Kentucky Named because of nearby Camp Breckinridge which was named for John C Breckinridge U S Vice President and Confederate general Lee County 1870 Confederate Kentucky Vanceburg named for Confederate Colonel and North Carolina governor Zebulon Baird Vance His wife was from Kentucky Parks edit Fairview Jefferson Davis State Historic Site 1957 the site includes Davis s birthplace a memorial to Davis that includes a 341 ft obelisk the second tallest obelisk in the world after the Washington Monument Confederate flags and other signs and plaques 275 Lexington A historical marker identifying the approximate site of the birth of Confederate Brigadier General David Rice Atchison is located along Highway 1974 in the Landsdowne neighborhood of Lexington Kentucky 276 Roads edit Elkton Jefferson Davis Highway Jefferson Davis Road Erlanger General Ross Drive General Stuart Drive Jefferson Davis Place Robert E Lee Drive Madisonville Jefferson Davis Drive Mayfield Jeff Davis Road Olive Hill John Hunt Morgan Lane Raywick Robert Lee Road Vine Grove Stand Watie Road Highways edit Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway Marker located in the Fountain Avenue median in Paducah 1935 The marker is along an auxiliary route that follows U S Route 68 from Bowling Green Kentucky to Paducah Kentucky 266 Schools edit Bedford Trimble County High School named their mascot the Raiders in honor of John Hunt Morgan s men Danville Boyle County High School uses the Rebels nickname 277 Eastern Allen Central High School Allen Central athletic teams are nicknamed the Rebels The school features various Confederate iconography 278 Atherton High School in Louisville used the Rebels nickname until 2021 277 279 Florence Boone County High School uses the Rebels nickname 277 Liberty Casey County High School uses the Rebels nickname 277 Munfordville Hart County High School named their mascot the Raiders in honor of John Hunt Morgan s men Also a large mural in the town depicts Morgan Owenton Owen County High School uses the Rebels nickname 277 Richmond Eastern Kentucky University EKU athletic teams are nicknamed the Colonels a Confederate figure 280 Todd County Central High School uses the nickname Rebels 277 Louisiana editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Louisiana As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 83 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Louisiana 95 State capitol edit Gov Francis T Nicholls Statue 1934 Nicholls was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army Gov Henry Watkins Allen Statue 1934 Allen was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army He is buried on the Old Louisiana State Capitol grounds Silent Sentinel Monument officially the Confederate Soldiers of East and West Baton Rouge Parishes Memorial Plinth erected 1886 and statue in 1890 Dedicated by Gov John McEnery Original granite and marble plinth cracked replaced in the 1960s with a small brick plinth that was aesthetically unappealing Formerly at North Boulevard and 3rd Street near City Hall In 2012 to make room for Town Square construction it was moved to the nearby Old Louisiana State Capitol now a museum 281 Plaque reads Erected by the men and women of East and West Baton Rouge to perpetuate the heroism and patriotic devotion of the noble soldiers from the two parishes who wore the gray and crossed the river with their immortal leaders to rest under the shade of the trees Original monument erected 1886 A D Buildings edit nbsp Confederate Memorial Hall in New OrleansBaton Rouge Edmund Kirby Smith Hall at Building Louisiana State University 1965 2011 In 2017 slated for demolition 281 Thibodaux P G T Beauregard Hall at Nicholls State University 1961 2010 The school is named for Confederate General and later Governor Francis T Nicholls New Orleans Gibson Hall at Tulane University 1894 named for Randall L Gibson Confederate Memorial Hall Museum 1891 the oldest museum in Louisiana 282 Adolph Meyer School 1917 New Orleans named for Confederate general Adolph Meyer who served nine terms in the U S House of Representatives and advocated for the construction of the Algiers Naval Station across the street from where the school was later built The school was renamed in the 1990s for Harriet Tubman Monuments edit Courthouse monuments edit Alexandria Rapides Parish Confederate Monument 1914 Benton Confederate Soldier Monument 1910 East Feliciana Parish Confederate Soldiers Monument in Front of the East Feliciana Courthouse Clinton Louisiana 283 Franklin Confederate Monument 1913 Lake Charles South s Defenders Monument 1915 knocked from its pedestal by Hurricane Laura 284 Opelousas Confederate Monument 1920 Port Allen Henry Watkins Allen Statue 1962 Shreveport Confederate Monument on grounds of the Caddo Parish courthouse dedicated in 1906 by UDC NRHP listed 285 Moved to private land in rural De Soto County in 2022 286 St Francisville Confederate Monument 1903 Has Confederate flag above the inscription In memory of West Feliciana s Confederate dead wherever at rest Co C 1st Regt La Cavalry Tallulah Confederate Monument 1912 Winnfield Confederate Monument 1926 Other public monuments edit nbsp Greenwood Cemetery New Orleans nbsp Army of Tennessee Tomb Metairie Cemetery New Orleans nbsp Monument at Camp Moore Tangipahoa Parish nbsp Charles Didier Dreux statue in New OrleansBaton Rouge Breckinridge s March Monument 1931 Confederate Monument 1886 Jefferson Davis Highway Monument Belle Chasse Judah P Benjamin Monument 1968 Clinton Confederate Monument 1909 DeSoto Parish monuments commemorating the Battle of Pleasant Hill include Lieutenant Gen Richard Taylor memorial 1994 outside Pleasant Hill American Legion Hall 287 Red River Campaign memorial 1994 288 UDC Confederate memorial 289 Donaldsonville Fort Butler Memorial 1999 Gretna Jefferson Davis Highway Marker Homer Confederate Monument 1940 Johnson Bayou Robert E L Statue 1984 Lafayette Brig Gen J J Alfred A Mouton Statue 1922 There was considerable local discussion about what to do with the monument 290 291 Removed on July 18 2021 292 Marthaville Unknown Confederate Soldier Monument 1970 Minden Confederate Monument 1933 New Orleans Confederate Monument 1874 Greenwood Cemetery 293 Army of Tennessee Tomb 1886 at Metairie Cemetery consisting of a Gothic chapel tomb containing 48 vaults surmounted by an equestrian statue of Albert Sidney Johnston A marble statue near the tomb s entrance shows a Confederate sergeant calling the roll Johnston P G T Beauregard and other Confederate soldiers are entombed there 294 Monument to Confederate Colonel Charles Didier Dreux first Confederate officer killed in action At intersection of South Jefferson Davis Parkway and Canal Street across from former location of Jefferson Davis Monument 295 Monument to Catholic priest Abram J Ryan called poet priest of the Confederacy At South Jefferson Davis Parkway and Banks Street Erected in 1949 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy 295 Monument to General Albert Pike at South Jefferson Davis Parkway and Tulane Avenue Erected 1957 Defaced with Black Lives Matter in 2015 295 Plaquemine Confederate Memorial 1914 Shreveport Fort Humbug Confederate Memorial 1927 Tangipahoa Parish Confederate monument 1907 at Camp Moore a museum and former Confederate training camp 296 Zachary Port Hudson Confederate Monument 1930 Inhabited places edit Allen Parish Named after Henry Watkins Allen Confederate General and Governor of Louisiana during the Confederacy Allendale a neighborhood in Shreveport where Henry Watkins Allen lived Beauregard Parish 1913 Jefferson Davis Parish 1912 Village of Longstreet unincorporated City of Stonewall named 1862 incorporated 1972 City of Slidell named for John Slidell Confederate ambassador to France Parks edit Marthaville Rebel State Historic Site 1962 Roads edit Baton Rouge Confederate Avenue Jeff Davis Street Lee Drive 95 Bell City Jeff Davis Road Bogalusa Jefferson Davis Drive Bossier City General Bragg Drive General Ewell Drive General Polk Drive General Sterling Price Drive Jeb Stuart Drive Kirby Smith Drive Longstreet Place Robert E Lee Boulevard Robert E Lee Street Chalmette Beauregard Street Gretna Beauregard Drive Houma Jefferson Davis Street Lafayette Jeff Davis Drive Lake Charles Beauregard Drive Beauregard Avenue Beauregard Street Merryville Robert E Lee Road Monroe Jefferson Davis Drive New Orleans Beauregard Drive Dreux Avenue named for Confederate General Charles Didier Dreux Gayarre Place named for Charles Gayarre a financial supporter of the Confederacy Clio muse or goddess of history is on a monument Gayarre was a historian The monument was paid for by George Hacker Dunbar an artilleryman during the Civil War married to a niece of General Beauregard The original statue was replaced in 1938 after vandals damaged it 297 Governor Nicholls Street Jefferson Davis Parkway Originally named Hagan Avenue name changed in 1911 to coincide with the unveiling of the Jefferson Davis Monument 295 now Norman C Francis Parkway Lee Circle 95 Polk Street Robert E Lee Boulevard Slidell Street Pineville Jefferson Davis Drive Longstreet Drive Rayne Jeff Davis Avenue Schools edit De Ridder Beauregard Alternative School East Beauregard Elementary School 2001 De Ridder East Beauregard High School 1962 Monroe Robert E Lee Junior High School now Neville Junior High School Longville South Beauregard Elementary School South Beauregard High School Louisiana State University is home of the LSU Tigers 1896 and Lady Tigers teams also known as the Fighting Tigers named for the Louisiana Tigers several Confederate Civil War regiments 298 299 Saint Bernard P G T Beauregard Middle School closed 300 Thibodaux Nicholls State University 1948 named for CSA Brig Gen Francis Redding Tillou Nicholls The school s mascot Colonel Tillou is also named for Nicholls 301 Confederate flag display edit Baton Rouge The Stars and Bars Confederate flag and the Bonnie Blue Flag are flown behind City Hall along with the Flag of Louisiana 281 Maryland edit nbsp The Confederate Soldier Loudon Park National Cemetery BaltimoreSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Maryland There are at least 7 confederate monuments on public land They are generally in or near cemeteries As of December 27 2022 there is one statue on a large stone of general Lee at the Antietam battlefield visible from the road It was on private land adjacent to the park and was donated with the land The Talbot Boys statue in Easton Maryland was the last Confederate monument removed from public property on March 14 2022 State symbols edit nbsp Flag of Maryland since 1904Flag of Maryland 1904 The state flag of Maryland features the red and white Crossland Banner the unofficial state flag of Maryland used by secessionists and Confederates during the American Civil War 302 303 304 305 The current state flag started appearing after the Civil War as a form of reconciliation The flag became official in 1904 The former state song Maryland My Maryland calls on the state to join the Confederacy 306 Prior to 2021 the Maryland General Assembly voted nine times to repeal replace or alter the state song all without any success In 2017 the Mighty Sound of Maryland the marching band of the University of Maryland at College Park stopped playing the song 307 In March 2021 both houses of the Maryland General Assembly voted by substantial margins to abandon Maryland My Maryland as the state song On May 18 2021 governor Larry Hogan signed the bill officially repealing the state song 308 Since then Maryland has had no official state song Monuments edit Public monuments edit Baltimore Confederate monuments at Loudon Park National Cemetery include The Confederate Soldier 1874 309 Fort McHenry Monument 1912 dedicated to Confederate soldiers who died at Fort McHenry when it was a prisoners of war camp 310 Scotland St Mary s County Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument 1876 and Point Lookout Confederate Cemetery Monument 1910 located at Point Lookout Confederate Cemetery 311 As of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 Washington County Robert E Lee Statue at Antietam Creek Antietam National Battlefield 2003 312 The statue is attempting to be removed by legislation through H R 970 2019 313 and the National Park Service acknowledges the inaccuracies of the statue and educates those in the park accordingly Samuel Garland Jr Monument 1993 314 Private monuments edit nbsp Monument to the Unknown Confederate Soldiers Frederick MarylandBeallsville Memorial to Confederate soldiers at Monocacy Cemetery 1911 replaced 1975 315 Frederick Monument to the Unknown Confederate Soldiers 1881 Mount Olivet Cemetery 316 Silver Spring Confederate Monument Grace Episcopal Church Cemetery 1896 Commemorated the death and burial of 17 unknown Confederate Soldiers who died at the Battle of Fort Stevens The monument a stone obelisk could be seen from Georgia Ave 317 318 Fox s Gap Frederick County Maryland North Carolina Monument 2003 The monument is a life sized bronze figure of a wounded Confederate color bearer on a base of black granite It was created by sculptor Gary Casteel for the Living History association of Mecklinburg North Carolina and unveiled on October 18 2003 It is dedicated to all the North Carolina troops who fought in the Battle of South Mountain Fox s Gap is the southernmost battlefield of the Battle of South Mountain The property is owned by the Central Maryland Heritage League a battlefield protection group 319 nbsp North Carolina Memorial at Fox s Gap 2003 White s Ferry Montgomery County Confederate Monument a granite pedestal nbsp The base of the CSA monument moved from Rockville MD to White s Ferry MD The original monument a bronze life sized Confederate soldier on this pedestal was originally donated by the UDC and the United Confederate Veterans and built by the Washington firm of Falvey Granite Company at a cost of US 3 600 equivalent to 106 594 in 2022 The artist is unknown 320 The inscription says To Our Heroes of Montgomery Co Maryland That We Through Life May Not Forget to Love The Thin Gray Line Erected A D 1913 1861 CSA 1865 321 because Confederate uniforms are gray The Rockville dedication was on June 3 1913 Jefferson Davis s birthday 321 and was attended by 3 000 out of a county population of 30 000 322 It was originally located in a small triangular park 323 called Courthouse Square In 1971 urban renewal led to the elimination of the Square and the monument was moved to the east lawn of the Red Brick Courthouse no longer in use as such facing south 324 In 1994 it was cleaned and waxed by the Maryland Military Monuments Commission 320 The monument was defaced with Black Lives Matter in 2015 a wooden box was built over it to protect it 325 The monument was removed in July 2017 from its original location outside the Old Rockville Court House to private land 323 at White s Ferry in Dickerson Maryland 326 327 The statue was removed from the pedestal in June 2020 but the pedestal urging people to Love The Thin Gray Line remains Inhabited places edit Confederate Hills A residential community near Antietam National Battlefield where the streets are all named after Confederate generals including Longstreet Circle General Anderson Court General Branch Court General Gordon Circle General Hill Circle General Lee Drive General Stonewall Jackson Circle and General Stuart Court 328 329 Roads edit Potomac Jubal Early Court J E B Stuart RoadFerry edit nbsp Gen Jubal A Early nbsp The renamed White s Ferry ferryboatMontgomery County A passenger and vehicle ferry formerly named Gen Jubal A Early 1954 connected Montgomery County Maryland and Loudoun County Virginia Owned by White s Ferry it was named for Confederate General Jubal Early until June 2020 when it was renamed Historic White s Ferry 330 White s Ferry was the only ferry still in operation on the Potomac River until it ceased operations in Dec 2020 331 332 Gallery edit nbsp Point Lookout Confederate Cemetery Monument center and Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument nbsp Samuel Garland Jr Monument nbsp Confederate Memorial in Silver Spring to 17 unknown soldiers buried at Grace Episcopal Church Cemetery after the Battle of Fort StevensMassachusetts editAs of May 2019 update all public memorials listed by the Southern Poverty Law Center 95 had been removed 333 Private memorials edit Cambridge Memorial Hall Harvard University Stained glass windows to commemorate various figures among them Honor and Peace Window 1900 There is no inscription but a Harvard University page Memorial Hall explaining the windows says This window commemorates those who surrendered their lives in the War of the Rebellion Portrays two warriors one with sword high in triumph one kneeling in defeat who from the ribbons can be seen to be from different but related countries Student and Soldier Window 1889 Soldier wears gray uniform Michigan editAs of June 29 2020 update there is at least one known public monument of a confederate soldier in Michigan It is located in Allendale Michigan a town in Ottawa County A part of the Veterans Garden of Honor 1998 which features nine life sized statues of soldiers from various wars the statue in question depicts a union soldier and a confederate soldier back to back with a young slave at their feet holding a plaque reading Freedom to Slaves and the date January 5 1863 334 Minnesota editMurray County Central High School uses a Rebel mascot and the nickname Rebels 335 Mississippi editMain article List of Confederate monuments and memorials in Mississippi As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 147 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Mississippi 95 Missouri editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Missouri As of 24 June 2020 update there were at least 19 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Missouri 95 Monuments edit Courthouse monuments edit nbsp Statue of David Rice Atchison in front of the Clinton County Courthouse Plattsburg MissouriCape Girardeau Confederate War Memorial 1931 Columbia Confederate Monument 1935 Relocated to the Centralia Battlefield in September 2015 Huntsville Captain Delaney S Washburn Memorial 1976 Neosho Confederate Captain of Missouri Monument Palmyra Palmyra Massacre Monument 1907 Plattsburg Statute of CSA Brig Gen David Rice Atchison who was later a US SenatorOther public monuments edit nbsp UDC monument at Forest Hill and Calvary Cemetery Kansas City Missouri nbsp Union Confederate Monument Union Cemetery Kansas City MissouriBrookline Missouri State Guard Monument 2001 Centralia Boone County Confederate Memorial 1935 Dexter Frenchman s Spring Monument 1996 A natural gathering place for soldiers In July 1861 2 000 soldiers from 15 southeast Missouri counties met to organize as the First Division Missouri State Guard the pro Confederate state militia known as the Swamp Fox Brigade Higginsville Confederate Memorial State Historic Site also called Lion of Lucerne 1906 Kansas City UDC monument at Forest Hill and Calvary Cemetery to CSA soldiers killed at the Battle of Westport Buried nearby is CSA General Joseph O Shelby 336 Union Confederate Monument Union Cemetery 1911 Monument to the Loyal Women of the Old South 337 The memorial to Confederate women a 1934 gift by the United Daughters of the Confederacy was defaced by graffiti on August 18 2017 and boxed up two days later in preparation for its removal The monument was removed on August 25 2017 338 Keytesville Sterling Price Monument Price Park 1915 Lone Jack Cemetery monument to Confederate soldiers who died in the Battle of Lone Jack 339 Marshall Confederate Monument of Saline 1901 Neosho Considered the state capital by Confederates has two memorials 337 Marker on court house lawn states that Missouri separated from the Union 337 Memorial at Oddfellows Cemetery 1904 near a mass grave 340 Roanoke Shelby s Homecoming Monument 1997 Springfield Two monuments are located at Springfield National Cemetery the Monument to Confederate Soldiers of Missouri and General Sterling Price 337 1901 and a UDC granite marker to the unknown Confederate dead at the Battle of Wilson s Creek 1958 341 In late August 2017 someone threw paint on it as of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 St Louis Memorial to the Confederate Dead Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery 1988 342 Waverly CSA Gen Joseph O Shelby Statue 2009 West Alton Confederate Memorial Lincoln Shields Recreation Area 1909 343 Inhabited places edit Atchison County Missouri Named for Brigadier General David Rice Atchison Breckenridge Named for U S Vice President and Confederate general John C Breckinridge although the name was misspelled 344 Parks edit Keytesville Price Park memorializes Major General Sterling Price 1915 Higginsville Confederate Memorial State Historic Site 345 Roads edit Battlefield South Robert E Lee Street Hillsboro Jefferson Davis Drive Sappington General Lee Drive Confederacy DriveSchools edit Southland C 9 School District Rebelman mascot school colors red gray and white Montana editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Montana As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 2 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Montana 95 Beaverhead Confederate Dam 346 347 Beaverhead Jeff Davis Creek 348 Confederate Gulch historic gold mining camp founded in 1864 by Confederate soldiers including parolees 349 350 Nevada editAs of June 24 2020 update there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in Nevada 95 Jeff Davis Peak in the Snake Range mountains of White Pine County was named in 1855 after Jefferson Davis The name was replaced after the George Floyd Protests New Jersey edit nbsp Confederate Monument 1910 Finn s Point National Cemetery There are at least two public spaces dedicated to the Confederacy in New Jersey 95 Pennsville Township Confederate Monument 1910 Finn s Point National Cemetery Commemorates the 2 436 Confederate prisoners of war who died at Fort Delaware 351 As of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 Princeton Princeton s Civil War Memorial 1920s Nassau Hall at Princeton University Commemorates 70 alumni who died in the war including 34 who fought for the Confederacy 352 353 New Mexico editAs of June 24 2020 update there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in New Mexico 95 Santa Fe Confederate memorial 1993 Santa Fe National Cemetery Granite and bronze memorial dedicated to 31 Confederate soldiers discovered in shallow graves in 1987 at Glorieta Pass Battlefield then re interred at Santa Fe National Cemetery 354 355 Socorro Confederate monument 2012 entitled Victory Awaits You 356 New York edit nbsp Confederate Monument Woodlawn National Cemetery Elmira New YorkAs of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 3 public spaces with Confederate monuments in New York 95 357 Monuments edit Public monuments edit The Bronx Busts of Stonewall Jackson and Robert E Lee were in the Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College The college removed the busts in 2020 358 359 Central Park J Marion Sims In November 2017 the cover of Harper s Magazine featured J C Hallman s article Monumental Error about the Central Park monument of controversial surgeon and Confederate spy J Marion Sims 360 The timing coincided with the work New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio s committee on monuments and Hallman s article was distributed to members of New York s Public Design Commission The commission voted unanimously to remove Sims s statue and it was removed in April 2018 361 Hallman has since written articles about Sims s statue in Montgomery Alabama and is working on a book The Anarcha Quest about Sims and his so called first cure Anarcha Westcott 362 Private monuments edit Brooklyn A tree at St John s Episcopal Church bears a plaque installed by UDC in 1912 reading This tree was planted by CSA Gen Robert Edward Lee while stationed at Fort Hamilton 363 The plaque was removed in 2017 358 Elmira UDC monument 1937 at Woodlawn National Cemetery dedicated to Confederate soldiers who died in Elmira Prison 364 As of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 Hastings on Hudson Confederate marker at Mount Hope Cemetery 365 Roads edit Fort Hamilton Brooklyn General Lee Avenue The avenue was renamed to John Warren Avenue in 2022 to honor a 22 year old lieutenant in the Army who was killed in the Vietnam War in January 1969 366 Stonewall Jackson Drive The road was later renamed to Washington Road in 2022 shortly after the renaming of General Lee Avenue Governor Andrew Cuomo had twice requested the Army unsuccessfully to have these streets renamed 359 Throggs Neck The Bronx Longstreet Avenue named for CSA Gen James Longstreet 367 North Carolina editMain article List of Confederate monuments and memorials in North Carolina As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 164 public spaces with Confederate monuments in North Carolina 95 Ohio editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Ohio As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 5 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Ohio 95 Historical marker edit In 2013 the state of Ohio erected 32 historical markers marking the John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail 368 369 Monuments edit nbsp Confederate Soldier Memorial Camp Chase Columbus nbsp The Lookout 1910 Johnson s Island Ottawa County 370 Columbus Camp Chase Cemetery s Confederate Soldier Memorial Dedicated in 1902 Statue on top was toppled and decapitated by vandals in August 2017 The vandals took the head 371 372 The Veterans Administration stated that the statue will be repaired 373 As of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 The statue was repaired by McKay Lodge Art Conservation Laboratory in Oberlin and reinstalled on March 30 2019 374 Pomeroy Statue of Confederate general John Hunt Morgan Sandusky Bay Four UDC monuments are located at Confederate Stockade Cemetery on Johnson s Island the first facility built by the Union Army solely for imprisoning Confederate soldiers 370 As of October 2018 it is one of 7 cemeteries with Confederate monuments that the Veterans Administration has under 24 hour guard 238 West Point Marker for Battle of Salineville the northernmost point Confederate forces reached Inhabited places edit Confederate Hills a neighborhood in Batavia Township named for the Confederate cause that is home to roads named for a CSA leader and various southern locations notably Stanton Hall and the Natchez Trace Roads edit Batavia Township Stonewall Ridge memorializing CSA Gen Stonewall Jackson Day Heights Colonel Mosby Drive memorializing CSA Col John S Mosby Fairfield Robert E Lee Drive memorializing CSA Gen Robert E Lee Stonewall Lane memorializing CSA Gen Stonewall Jackson Mt Repose Beauregard Court memorializing CSA Gen P G T Beauregard Jeb Stuart Drive memorializing CSA Gen J E B Stuart Monassas Run Road memorializing the CSA victory at the battle at Manassas known to the North as Bull Run Stonewall Jackson Drive memorializing CSA Gen Stonewall Jackson Schools edit Cleveland John Adams High School uses the Rebels team name but the mascot more closely resembles a cavalier than a Confederate soldier 375 Mcconnelsville Morgan High School is named for Confederate General John Hunt Morgan Their nickname is the Raiders Willoughby Willoughby South High School dropped its Confederate uniformed mascot and removed all remaining Confederate imagery from the school while retaining the Rebels team name and school colors grey and blue In 1993 the school dropped Stars and Bars as the school song and removed Confederate imagery from school uniforms 375 Oklahoma editAs of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 13 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Oklahoma 95 Buildings edit Ardmore Oklahoma Confederate Home operated as OK Confederate Home from 1911 to 1942 Renamed Oklahoma Veterans Center after last residing confederate veteran passed 376 377 Monuments edit nbsp Stand Watie Monument Polson Cemetery Delaware County nbsp Confederate Monument at Cherokee National CapitolArdmore Confederate Monument 1910 at Oklahoma Veterans Center formerly Oklahoma Confederate Home has pair CSA and Union monuments 377 14 Confederate Monument 2013 at Rose Hill Cemetery 378 Atoka Two monuments are located at the Confederate Cemetery for soldiers killed in the Battle of Middle Boggy 377 379 Delaware County Two monuments to CSA General Stand Watie at Polson Cemetery the first erected c 1910 20 and the second erected in 1971 377 Durant Confederate Soldier Statue at Bryan County Courthouse erected in 1917 by UDC Dedicated in 1918 380 381 Confederate Monument at Highland Cemetery 377 Hugo Rose Hill Mayes County Confederate Monument at site of Second Battle of Cabin Creek 1961 377 Oklahoma City Confederate Monument in Fairlawn Cemetery 1923 377 Oktaha Memorial in Oktaha Cemetery to Confederate soldiers who died in the Battle of Honey Springs 1940 377 Rentiesville Confederate Soldiers Monument 1983 in Honey Springs Battlefield by UDC and Children of the Confederacy 95 377 Texas Confederates Memorial in Honey Springs Battlefield by UDC 377 Tahlequah Confederate Monument at Cherokee National Capitol 1913 377 Removed in 2020 382 Stand Watie Monument 1971 377 Removed in 2020 382 Wynnewood Confederate Soldier monument 2004 383 Schools edit nbsp Robert E Lee School in Durant OklahomaDurant Robert E Lee Elementary School 384 Oklahoma City school board studying renaming in 2017 Robert E Lee Elementary School 1910 385 now Adelaide Lee Elementary School Jackson Elementary School 1910 385 now Mary Golda Ross Enterprise Elementary School Wheeler Elementary School 1910 385 Stand Watie Elementary School 1930 385 now Esperanza Elementary School Pauls Valley Lee Elementary School 95 Inhabited places edit Jackson County 1907 sources dispute if the name is for the CSA General or President Jackson Roger Mills County 1907 named for Roger Q Mills Confederate colonel and later Congressman and U S Senator Town of Stonewall 1874 for Stonewall JacksonRoads edit Jay Stand Watie RoadOregon editAs of 24 June 2020 update there are no public spaces with Confederate monuments in Oregon 95 Pennsylvania editAs of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 3 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Pennsylvania 95 Monuments edit See also List of monuments of the Gettysburg Battlefield Confederate monuments nbsp Virginia State Monument 1917 Gettysburg Battlefield nbsp Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument 1911 Philadelphia National Cemetery Gettysburg Gettysburg Battlefield In addition to the monuments listed below the battlefield features monuments to specific Confederate units 386 Alabama State Monument 1933 Joseph Urner sculptor Arkansas State Monument 1966 Armistead s Last Stand Marker for Brig Gen Lewis A Armistead 1887 Army of Northern Virginia Marker 1908 Culp Brothers Memorial 2013 Gary Casteel sculptor near entrance Gettysburg Heritage Center Honors brothers who fought on opposite sides Confederate Private Wesley Culp and Union Lieutenant William Culp Brother against Brother 387 Lt Gen Richard S Ewell s Headquarters Marker 1920 Florida State Monument 1963 Georgia State Monument 1961 High Water Mark of the Rebellion Monument 1892 Lt Gen Ambrose P Hill s Headquarters Marker 1920 Gen Robert E Lee Equestrian Statue 1917 atop the Virginia State Monument Gen Robert E Lee Headquarters Marker 1920 Lt Gen James Longstreet Equestrian Statue 1998 Lt Gen James Longstreet Headquarters Marker 1907 Louisiana State Monument 1971 Donald De Lue sculptor Maryland State Monument 1994 Honors Maryland soldiers on both the Union and Confederate sides Mississippi State Monument 1973 Donald De Lue sculptor North Carolina State Monument 1929 Gutzon Borglum sculptor Borglum was also the first sculptor on the Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial Carving project North Carolina Memorial Tablet Soldiers and Sailors of the Confederacy Monument 1965 Donald De Lue sculptor South Carolina State Monument 1963 Tennessee State Monument 1982 Texas State Monument 1964 Virginia State Monument 1917 Frederick William Sievers sculptor Features a larger than life sculpture group Virginia to Her Sons at Gettysburg and is topped by an equestrian statue of Gen Robert E Lee The National Park Service says the monument will not be removed 388 McConnellsburg Confederate Soldiers Monument dedicated in 1929 Last Confederate Bivouac Monument dedicated in 1930 Philadelphia Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument 1911 Philadelphia National Cemetery Commemorates 184 Confederate prisoners of war who died in Philadelphia area hospitals and camps Roads edit Gettysburg Confederate Avenue McConnellsburg Confederate LaneRhode Island editAs of 24 June 2020 update there are no public spaces with Confederate monuments in Rhode Island 95 South Carolina editMain article List of Confederate monuments and memorials in South Carolina As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 194 public spaces with Confederate monuments in South Carolina 95 389 South Dakota editIn July 2020 the Confederate flag was removed from the patch of Gettysburg South Dakota police officers As of June 24 2020 update there is at least one public space with Confederate monuments in South Dakota 95 Gettysburg The Gettysburg police uniforms feature a patch with overlapping U S and Confederate flags and a civil war era cannon along with the city s name in a nod to the city s namesake Gettysburg Pennsylvania site of the famous Battle of Gettysburg 390 The historical reference logo for the police emblem and uniform patch was designed in 2009 391 95 Tennessee editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Tennessee and Nathan Bedford Forrest Historical reputation and legacy Further information Tennessee in the American Civil War As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 105 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Tennessee 95 The Tennessee Heritage Protection Act 2016 and a 2013 law restrict the removal of statues and memorials 43 The Tennessee legislature designated Confederate Decoration Day the origin of Memorial Day as June 3 and in 1969 392 designated January 19 and July 13 their birthdays as Robert E Lee Day and Nathan Bedford Forrest day respectively State capitol edit Nathan Bedford Forrest Bust On display in the Capital rotunda since 1978 Former governor Bill Haslam wished to remove it but he was not supported by the Legislature or the Capitol Commission In 2010 the state moved the Forrest bust from outside the doors of the House of Representatives chamber to its current location between the legislature s two chambers It was relocated in order to make room for a bust of Sampson Keeble Tennessee s first black legislator 393 In January 2019 a group of students demonstrated at the capital calling for its removal 394 Buildings edit Greeneville General Morgan Inn located at the spot where Confederate general John Hunt Morgan was killed Harrogate 1 Grant Lee Building at Lincoln Memorial University was named in honor of the two famous civil war generals Lincoln Memorial University was named in honor of Abraham Lincoln Murfreesboro Forrest Hall at Middle Tennessee State University The Tennessee Board of Regents has unanimously recommended the name change on the recommendation of a campus task force and the university president but it has yet to pass the Tennessee Historical Commission which plans public hearings 395 396 Monuments edit Courthouse monuments edit nbsp Tipton County Courthouse Covington nbsp Confederate Monument Chip Franklin nbsp Confederate Women monument NashvilleBenton Confederate memorial 2009 397 Blountville Confederate Memorial 1928 397 Bolivar Monument to the Memory of Fallen Confederate Sons 1873 Brownsville Confederate Memorial 1909 Carthage Smith County Confederate Monument 397 Smith County War Memorial 1976 397 Charlotte Confederate Monument 2001 Confederate Veterans Memorial honoring those from Dickson County who served the CSA Confederate Veterans Memorial 2012 honoring gallant soldiers veterans and their families 397 Cleveland United Daughters of the Confederacy Monument 1911 32 191 Cookeville Eternal Flame honors all Putnam County veterans 397 Covington Confederate Monument 1895 397 Decaturville Confederate Monument 397 Dover Fort Donelson The Confederate fort was named for CSA General Daniel Smith Donelson but captured by Union General Grant in 1862 who retained the Fort s name saying Fort Donelson will hereafter be marked in Capitals on the maps of our United Country Also contains Confederate Monument donated by United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1933 398 Dresden Weakley County Confederate Monument 1915 Dyersburg Confederate Monument 1905 United Confederate Veterans Civil War Plaques 1926 397 Erwin War Memorial 397 Fayetteville Civil War Memorial in memory of the three thousand Confederate soldiers of Lincoln County 1906 Women s Monument to those who kept up the responsibilities of farms and businesses during the Civil War 1904 397 Franklin Our Confederate Soldiers Monument 1899 UDC monument known locally as Chip memorializes soldiers who died in the Battle of Franklin Since by state law it cannot be removed the city of Franklin with broad support wants to install historic markers depicting the experience of the African Americans before during and after the Civil War The UDC opposes this claiming ownership of the Public Square As of December 2018 the issue is in litigatioN 399 400 Greeneville John Hunt Morgan Memorial 397 Jackson Our Confederate Dead Monument 1888 Lafayette Macon County Confederate Monument 2001 Lebanon 1901 monument to the Confederacy 2011 memorial to those from the County who served in the Army of Tennessee General Robert Hopkins Hatton marker 1912 397 Lewisburg Confederate Soldier Monument 1904 Manchester Erected 1991 by United Daughters of the Confederacy 397 McMinnville Warren County Civil War Memorial 2004 397 Murfreesboro Rutherford County Confederate Memorial 1901 Rutherford County Confederate Veterans Memorial 2011 Nathan Bedford Forrest Memorial Tablet 1912 Nashville Tennessee Confederate Women s Monument Belle Kinney Scholz sculptor 1926 Paris Confederate Monument 1900 Pulaski Rebel Martyr Sam Davis Statue 1906 Savannah Confederate Monument 1995 Selmer Confederate Memorial 1994 Shelbyville Confederate Memorial in Memory of the Shelbyville Rebels Company F 41st Tennessee Regiment CSA 1937 32 205 Smithville DeKalb County Confederate Monument 1996 Spencer Confederate Monument 1988 Springfield Confederate Monuments two monuments 1997 2012 397 Trenton Oakland Cemetery Confederate Monument commissioned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1900 and Confederate marker commissioned by the Sons of Confederate Veterans in 1990 Listed on the NRHP 401 Union City Confederate Monument 1869 Waynesboro Confederate Monument 2003 Other public monuments edit Altamont Confederate Memorial 1896 depicting flags of the Confederacy 397 Beechgrove Nathan Bedford Forrest monument in Beechgrove Confederate Cemetery Memorial to the 20th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry 2008 in Beechgrove Confederate Cemetery 397 Centerville Confederate Civil War Memorial Plaque 397 Chapel Hill Obelisk with Confederate flag on the site where Nathan Bedford Forrest was born 402 There is also a medallion shaped monument outside city hall with a Confederate flag 402 Chattanooga statue of Alexander P Stewart a confederate lieutenant in front of the Chattanooga Hamilton County Courthouse 1919 Efforts have been made to remove this statue 403 Clarksville Confederate Monument 1893 Greenwood Cemetery 404 Clifton Nathan Bedford Forrest Memorial 397 Columbia Confederate Funeral Rest Memorial Rose Hill Cemetery 1882 397 Cookeville Confederate Memorial Cookeville Cemetery 2004 397 Covington Nathan Bedford Forrest Memorial Tipton County Museum 1998 397 Crossville Confederate and Union Memorial 405 Denmark Britton Lane Confederate Monument 1897 Dover Confederate Monument Fort Donelson 1933 397 Dyersburg Confederate monument 2004 Old City Cemetery 397 Erwin Confederate Memorial Ohio Avenue 1903 397 nbsp Pyramid of cannonballs commemorate Patrick Cleburne in Franklin TennesseeFranklin Confederal Funeral Rest Memorial Rose Hill Cemetery 397 Cannonballs are stacked in a pyramid to commemorate where CSA General Patrick Cleburne died in the Battle of Franklin 406 Gallatin Confederate Soldiers Monument 1903 Hamilton County Chickamauga amp Chattanooga National Military Park Numerous monuments and memorials to Confederate soldiers and units as well as Union monuments Humboldt Confederate Monument 1900 Bailey Park Knoxville A stone monument was erected in 1914 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy at the corner of 17th Street and Laurel Avenue in the Fort Sanders neighborhood defaced in August 2017 407 Civil War Memorial 1901 Knoxville National Cemetery Monument to the Confederate dead 1892 Bethel Avenue 397 Historical marker with Confederate flag in front of Immaculate Conception Church for Father Abram Ryan called Poet of the Confederacy Lebanon Confederate Memorial Gen Hatton Statue 1912 Rutherford County grounds around the County Courthouse contain a 1901 monument to the Confederacy and a 2011 memorial to those from the County who served in the Army of Tennessee Lynchburg Confederate Veterans Memorial Moore County Public Square 397 Memphis Monument to Captain J Harvey Mathes 37th Tennessee CSA 408 Confederate Memorial 1878 Elmwood Cemetery 824 Dudley Street 397 Mount Pleasant Confederate Monument 1907 Mulberry Confederate Memorial 1909 Murfreesboro Confederate Circle in Evergreen Cemetery was established in 1891 as a memorial to approximately 2 000 Confederate soldiers whose remains were reinterred there Nashville Confederate Private Monument 1909 in Centennial Park Confederate Gallery Ryman Auditorium 409 Mount Olivet Cemetery had a burial and memorial area established by a ladies group shortly after the Civil War which became known as Confederate Circle The Hermitage UDC monument and gates 1941 at the Tennessee Confederate Soldiers Cemetery 410 Obion Obion Veterans Memorial honoring those who were killed in service and were MIA POW in Civil War World Wars I amp II Korea Vietnam Desert Storm Afghanistan and Iraq 2006 397 Parkers Crossroads Freeman s Battery 2002 Morton s Battery 2007 Pulaski Seventh Kentucky Mounted Infantry Memorial 1911 Confederate subsection with a Confederate monument dedicated by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1913 Maplewood Cemetery 411 Santa Fe Memorial plaque to Maury County Light Artillery Confederate public square 397 Tazewell Confederate memorial 2000 honoring unknown Confederate dead located in Irish Memorial Cemetery 397 Trimble Cemetery Ridge Memorial Plaza honoring Merion Spence Parks and Williams Hamilton Parks II members of UDC and SCV respectively 2012 397 Union City Confederate Monument Kiwanis Park 1909 Confederate Monument to Unknown Soldiers Old Soldiers Cemetery Summer Street at Edwards Street 1869 397 Winchester UDC Memorial to Confederate soldiers 1950 City Cemetery SCV Memorial to Confederate soldiers 2003 Confederate Cemetery adjoining the City Cemetery 397 Woodbury 1926 monument honors all confederate soldiers and marks the spot where CSA Lt Col John B Hutchenson was killed 397 Private monuments edit Nashville Nathan Bedford Forrest Statue made of fiberglass over foam 25 feet high on private land 412 near Interstate 65 installed in 1998 built with private money It is surrounded by Confederate battle flags constituting what the owner calls Confederate Flag Park No government recognizes it as a park and the entrance is chained shut with a No Trespassing sign The giant statue is visible from the highway to anyone entering the city from the south 413 It has been called hideous 413 and ridiculous 414 There have been numerous calls for its removal Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam said It s not a statue that I like and sic that most Tennesseans are proud of in any way 415 Former Nashville Mayor Megan Barry called the statue an offensive display of hatred 415 In 2015 Nashville s Metro Council voted to petition the Tennessee Department of Transportation to plant obscuring vegetation 416 the Department declined because it is private land 413 Never mind that the T D O T itself removed the obscuring vegetation back in 1998 when the statue was first erected 413 415 There has been occasional vandalism in December 2017 it was covered in pussy hat pink paint 413 which Bill Dorris current owner of the land says he intends to leave 417 He also said that if trees are planted to block the view from I 65 he would make the statue taller 412 It was sculpted at no charge by notorious racist Jack Kershaw an attorney for Martin Luther King s murderer famous for having said Somebody needs to say a good word for slavery 418 419 Inhabited place edit Dixie Lee Junction an unincorporated community where the Dixie and Lee Highways intersect Parks edit Eva Nathan Bedford Forrest State Park 1963 Franklin Confederate Memorial Park at Winstead Hill ParkRoads edit Brentwood Jefferson Davis Drive Robert E Lee Lane Culleoka General Lee Road Dandridge Jeb Stuart Drive Stonewall Jackson Drive Elizabethton Stonewall Jackson Drive Eva Jeff Davis Drive Forest Hills Robert E Lee Drive Franklin General J B Hood Drive General Nathan Bedford Forrest Drive Jeb Stuart Drive Jefferson Davis Drive Gallatin Robert Lee Drive Nashville Beauregard Drive Jefferson Davis Drive Confederate Drive General Forrest Court Robert E Lee Court Robert E Lee Drives two different streets with the same name Newport Robert E Lee Drive Stonewall Jackson Driv Oak Hill Stonewall Jackson Court Pulaski Sam Davis Avenue Sam Davis Trail Sardis Jeff Davis Lane Smyrna Jeb Stuart Drive Lee Lane 95 Longstreet Drive Robert E Lee Lane Sam Davis Road Stonewall Drive Schools edit Chapel Hill Forrest High School Nashville Father Ryan High School named for Abram Ryan called Poet of the Confederacy Paris Robert E Lee School now called Paris Academy for the Arts Sewanee The University of the South Nowhere is the issue of Confederate remembrance more nettlesome than at Sewanee whose origin s are entwined with the antebellum South and the Confederacy 420 Confederate flags are in stained glass windows of the chapel as is the Seal of the Confederacy 420 It benefited greatly at its founding by a large gift from John Armfield at one time co owner of Franklin and Armfield the largest and most prosperous slave trading enterprise in the country Students as late as 1871 were required to wear uniforms of cadet gray cloth 421 Confederate flags hung in the chapel from its dedication in 1909 until the mid 1990s when they were removed reportedly to improve acoustics 422 There is an official portrait hanging at the University of Bishop Leonidas Polk an ardent defender of slavery 420 who was in charge of the celebration of the cornerstone laying in 1857 and said the new university will materially aid the South to resist and repel a fanatical domination which seeks to rule over us 423 He resigned his ecclesiastical position to become a major general in the Confederate army called Sewanee s Fighting Bishop and died in battle in 1864 His official portrait at the University depicts him dressed as a bishop with his army uniform hanging nearby However his portrait was moved from Convocation Hall to Archives and Special Collections in 2015 424 The Confederate flag was also emblazoned on the university mace that led processions marking the beginning and ending of the term from 1965 until 1997 At a special chapel service to celebrate Jefferson Davis birthday the Ceremonial Mace was consecrated to the memory of Nathan Bedford Forrest the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan by Bishop Charles C J Carpenter of Alabama one of the clergy who opposed Dr Martin Luther King Jr s activities in Birmingham in 1963 see A Call for Unity prompting King to write his Letter from a Birmingham Jail in response 422 The Vice Chancellor is the chief academic officer at the university the chancellor is a bishop of the Episcopal church Jefferson Davis and Robert E Lee both turned down offers of the position 425 Sewanee has a portrait of Davis 426 The first vice chancellor was Rt Rev Charles Todd Quintard called chaplain of the Confederacy He compiled the Confederate Soldiers Pocket Manual of Devotions Charleston 1863 427 The university s chief donor was John Armfield at the time co owner of Franklin and Armfield the largest slave trading firm in the U S He purchased the site and gave the university an endowment of 25 000 a year In addition to Polk Bishop Stephen Elliott the first and only Presiding Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America and Bishop James Hervey Otey later prominent in the Confederacy were significant founders of the university Generals Edmund Kirby Smith Josiah Gorgas and Francis A Shoup were prominent in the university s postbellum revival and continuance nbsp Calhoun Hall named for slave owner and Confederate supporter W H Calhoun Vanderbilt University Calhoun Hall named for William Henry Calhoun a slave owner Odd Fellows Grand Master and silversmith who was arrested for his Confederate support on the order of Union Brigadier General Robert Byington Mitchell pending the release of Union prisoners in 1863 428 429 Portrait of Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith by Cornelius Hankins in the Wyatt Center 430 Smith served as the chancellor of the University of Nashville from 1870 to 1875 430 Marble bust of Confederate Colonel and Board of Trust Treasurer Edmund William Cole in Kirkland Hall the administration building 431 He is also the namesake of the annual Cole Lecture 432 The campus includes several buildings tied to slavery and the Confederacy like McTyeire Hall named for pro slavery essayist Holland Nimmons McTyeire and Elliston Hall named for Elizabeth Boddie Elliston of the Burlington Plantation who owned slaves 433 434 435 Tourist sites edit Pigeon Forge Rebel Railroad was a small theme park built in 1961 its main attraction being a simulated Confederate steam train which afforded good Confederate citizens the opportunity to ride a five mile train route through hostile territory and to help repel a Yankee assault on the train Rebel Railroad was purchased in 1970 by Art Modell owner of the Cleveland Browns 436 437 438 In 2018 it is operating under the name Dollywood Morristown General Longstreet Headquarters Museum 439 Texas editSee also Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Texas Further information Texas in the American Civil War As of 24 June 2020 update there are at least 205 public spaces with Confederate monuments in Texas 95 440 Nowhere has the national re examination of Confederate emblems been more riven with controversy than the Lone Star State 441 State capitol edit The Texas Capitol itself is a Confederate monument according to then Land Commissioner Jerry E Patterson 442 The Texas Confederate Museum was once housed in the Capitol Confederate Soldiers Monument 1903 features four bronze figures representing the Confederate artillery cavalry infantry and navy A bronze statue of Jefferson Davis stands above them 443 The inscription reads Died for state rights guaranteed under the constitution The people of the South animated by the spirit of 1776 to preserve their rights withdrew from the federal compact in 1861 The North resorted to coercion The South against overwhelming numbers and resources fought until exhausted 444 Hood s Texas Brigade a monument to memorialize those who fought for the Confederacy 445 The monument includes a depiction of a Confederate soldier quotes by Confederate leaders a flag of the Confederacy and the Confederate battle flag 446 These are the only Confederate flags currently 2017 visible in the Capitol 447 Representative Eric Johnson has called for its removal 446 Terry s Texas Rangers Monument a monument to memorialize those who fought for the Confederacy 445 1907 State symbols edit nbsp Seal of TexasThe reverse side of the Seal of Texas 1992 includes the unfurled flags of the Kingdom of France the Kingdom of Spain the United Mexican States the Republic of Texas the Confederate States of America and the United States of America The Confederate flag is rendered as the Stars and Bars State holiday edit Confederate Heroes Day is celebrated on January 19 State employees have the day off April is Confederate History Month in Texas 448 Buildings edit Austin The John H Reagan state office building is located at 1400 Congress 445 Monuments edit Many monuments were donated by pro Confederacy groups like Daughters of the Confederacy County governments at the time voted to accept the gifts and take ownership of the statues 449 450 Courthouse monuments edit Alpine Confederate Colonel Henry Percy Brewster 1963 451 Aspermont Historical marker County Named for Confederate Hero Stonewall Jackson Stonewall County Courthouse 1963 Bastrop Monuments at Bastrop County Courthouse include Confederate Soldiers Monument 1910 452 Historical marker Home Town of Texas Confederate Major Joseph D Sayers 1963 453 Bay City Confederate Soldiers Monument 1913 Matagorda County Courthouse 454 455 Belton Confederate Soldiers Monument Bell County Courthouse 456 Bonham Confederate Soldiers Monument 1905 Fannin County Courthouse 457 Bryan Commemorative marker erected 1965 to the Brazos County Confederate Commissioners Court 458 Comanche Confederate Soldiers Monument 2002 Comanche County Courthouse 459 Corsicana Call to Arms Confederate Soldiers Monument by Louis Amateis 1907 Navarro County Courthouse 460 461 A Civil War bugler stands in uniform holding a bugle to his mouth with his proper right hand He holds a sword in his proper left hand at his side He wears a hat with a feather in it and knee high boots A bedroll is slung over his proper left shoulder and strapped across his chest and proper right hip The sculpture is mounted on a rectangular base 462 Isaac O Haver was a member of Co K of the 17th VA Cavalry He was a 17 year old bugler for his unit He was born Sep 20 1844 and died at the age of 27 on March 30 1872 He is buried at the Ladoga Cemetery 463 The plaques on the monument read South side The Call to Arms Erected 1907 by Navarro chapter United Daughters of the Confederacy To commemorate the valor and heroism of our Confederate Soldiers It is not in the power of mortals to command success The Confederate Soldier did more he deserved it But their fame on brightest pages penned by poets and by pages Shall go sounding down the ages West side Nor shall your glory be fought while fame her record keeps or honor points the hollowed spot where valor proudly sleeps Tell it as you may It never can be told Sing it as you Will It never can be sung The Story of the Glory of the men who wore the gray East side It is a duty we owe the dead who died for us But where memories can never die It is a duty we owe to posterity to see that our children shall know the virtues And rise worthy of their sires North side The soldiers of the Southern Confederacy fought valiantly for The liberty of state bequeathed them By their forefathers of 1776 Who Glorified Their righteous cause and they who made The sacrifice supreme in That they died To keep their country free 462 Clarksville Confederate Soldiers Monument Red River County County Courthouse 464 nbsp Denton TexasDenton Denton Confederate Soldier Monument Denton County Courthouse 465 Cost 2 000 a project of the Denton Chapter UDC Dedicated June 3 1918 Jefferson Davis s birthday 466 It had whites only drinking fountains on each side 467 In 2015 it was defaced with the words THIS IS RACIST in red paint 468 The twenty year campaign of a Denton resident Willie Hudspeth to have the monument removed was the subject of a Vice news video in 2018 467 After the wave of Confederate monument removals that followed the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville Virginia and in large part as a result of Hudspeth s campaign a county 15 person Confederate Memorial Committee met for three months in 2017 18 and recommended adding context two video kiosks and a large plaque with interviews about local veterans and the history of slavery 469 to the monument rather than removing it a suggestion accepted unanimously by the county commissioners Once the nature of the historical context has been determined approval of the Texas Historical Commission will be required 470 As of September 2018 the county still does not have a timeline for completing the project and there were no updates to report 471 The video caught the attention of Kali Holloway director of the Make It Right Project which is working to remove Confederate monuments She added the Denton monument to the group s top 10 list of monuments they consider priorities 242 471 The statue was removed in June 2020 472 Fort Worth Monument to Confederate Soldiers and their Descendents 1953 Tarrant County Courthouse 473 nbsp Dignified Resignation in Galveston TexasGalveston Dignified Resignation 1909 by Louis Amateis at the Galveston County Courthouse With his back turned to the US flag while carrying a Confederate flag it is the only memorial in Texas to feature a Confederate sailor 474 475 It was erected to the soldiers and sailors of the Confederate States of America An inscription on the plaque reads there has never been an armed force which in purity of motives intensity of courage and heroism has equaled the army and navy of the Confederate States of America 444 Gainesville Confederate Soldiers Monument Cooke County Courthouse 1911 476 477 nbsp Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Georgetown TexasGeorgetown Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument Williamson County Courthouse 1916 Goldthwaite Confederate Soldiers Monument Mills County Courthouse 478 Granbury Statue of CSA General Hiram B Granbury 1913 killed in the Battle of Franklin 1913 Hood County Courthouse Erected by UDC 479 Hillsboro Confederate Soldiers Monument Hill County Texas Courthouse 480 Jefferson Confederate Soldiers Monument 1907 moved to the courthouse in the 1930s Marion County Courthouse 481 482 Linden Confederate Monument 1903 Cass County Courthouse 483 Livingston Confederate Soldiers Monument Polk County Courthouse 484 Llano Confederate Soldiers Monument Llano County Courthouse 485 Lockhart Confederate Soldiers Monument Caldwell County Courthouse 486 Longview Confederate Soldiers Monument 1911 Gregg County Courthouse 487 488 Mount Pleasant Confederate Soldiers Monument 1912 Titus County Courthouse 489 490 Memphis Confederate Soldiers Monument Hall County Courthouse 491 Marshall Confederate Soldiers Monument 1906 Harrison County Courthouse 492 New Braunfels Confederate Soldiers Monument 1937 Comal County Courthouse 493 Paris Confederate Soldiers Monument Lamar County Courthouse 494 Confederate Soldiers Monument Kaufman Kaufman County Courthouse 495 Perryton Courthouse monument to CSA colonel William Beck Ochiltree 496 Rusk Confederate Soldiers Monument Cherokee County Courthouse 497 Sherman Confederate Soldiers Monument 1896 Grayson County Courthouse This was the first Confederate statue dedicated at a county courthouse in Texas 498 Snyder marker 1963 commemorating William Read Scurry Scurry County Courthouse 499 Stephenville Confederate Soldiers Monument 2001 Erath County Courthouse 500 nbsp Confederate Mothers Monument in TexarkanaTexarkana The Confederate Mothers Monument 1918 located in Texas near the state line with Arkansas is shared by the US District Court in Texarkana Texas and the US Post Office and Courthouse in Texarkana Arkansas 501 502 Vernon Confederate Soldiers Monument Wilbarger County Courthouse 503 Weatherford Confederate Soldiers Monument 1929 Parker County Courthouse 504 Waxahachie Confederate Soldiers Monument 1912 Ellis County Courthouse 505 506 Other public monuments edit nbsp Confederate Memorial Plaza in Anderson Texas nbsp Confederate Soldiers Monument Austin nbsp Confederate Monument BeaumontAlpine CSA Gen Lawrence Sul Ross Monument 1963 Anderson Confederate Memorial Plaza 2010 507 The plaza beside the Grimes County courthouse flies a Confederate flag behind a gate with metal lettering reading Confederate Memorial Plaza A metal statue depicts one of several Grimes County residents who fought with the 4th Texas volunteer infantry brigade in Virginia 444 Athens Henderson County Confederate Monument 1964 Austin Hood s Texas Brigade Monument Texas State Capitol Littlefield Fountain University of Texas commemorates George W Littlefield a university regent and CSA officer An inscription reads To the men and women of the Confederacy who fought with valor and suffered with fortitude that states sic rights be maintained Texas Confederate Women s and Men s Historical Markers at 3710 Cedar St and 1600 W Sixth commemorate campgrounds built to house and care for widows wives and veterans of the Confederacy 445 Beaumont Our Confederate Soldiers Monument 1912 Removed in June 2020 508 Clarksville Confederate Soldier Monument 1912 Cleburne Cleburne Monument 2015 Confederate Arch 1922 Coleman Hometown of Texas CSA Col James E McCord Monument 1963 College Station A statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross Confederate general and former president of A amp M University is located on the campus of Texas A amp M University In August 2017 the Chancellor of the university John Sharp confirmed that the university will not be removing the statue from the campus 509 Corpus Christi Queen of the Sea 1914 restored 1990 bas relief by Pompeo Coppini UDC sponsored Confederate memorial featuring an allegorical female figure representing Corpus Christie holding keys of success while receiving blessings from Mother Earth and Father Neptune who are standing next to her 474 Coppini was abhorrent of war and in Queen of the Sea he crafted a sculpture that symbolized peace and captured the spirit of Corpus Christi 510 El Paso Hometown of Texas CSA Capt James W Magoffin Monument 1964 CSA Maj Simeon Hart Monument 1964 Farmersville Confederate Soldier Monument 1917 Farmersville City Park 511 Fort Worth Confederate Soldier Memorial 1939 Oakwood Cemetery 474 Gainesville Confederate Heroes Statue 1908 in Leonard Park 512 513 Gonzales Confederate Soldiers Monument Confederate Square Dedicated on June 3 1909 To our Confederate dead 514 515 Greenville Confederate Soldier Monument 1926 Holliday Stonewall Jackson Camp 249 Monument 1999 Houston Spirit of the Confederacy 1908 in present location since 1925 by Louis Amateis 474 Erected by United Daughters of the Confederacy 516 Statue of Richard W Dowling located at the entrance to Hermann Park Erected in 1905 the monument was in front of City Hall until 1958 when it was moved to its present location In August 2017 Andrew Schneck was arrested at the statue with bomb materials 517 Kermit Col C M Winkler Monument 1963 Marshall Confederate Capitol of Missouri Monument 1963 Confederate Monument 1906 Home of Last Texas Confederate Gov Pendleton Murrah Monument 1963 Miami Col O M Roberts Monument 1963 nbsp John H Reagan Memorial in Palestine Texas The allegorical figure seated beneath Reagan represents the Lost Cause of the Confederacy 474 Palestine John H Reagan Memorial 1911 by Pompeo Coppini 474 Sabine Pass Sabine Pass Battleground State Historic Site Where the Sabine River enters the Gulf of Mexico 47 Confederate men held off a large Union attack destroying two Union boats and capturing hundreds of prisoners Today the site is managed by the Texas Historical Commission and it hosts battle reenactments in honor of the Confederate soldiers Sherman Confederate Soldier Monument 1897 Tomball Confederate Powder Mill Marker Monument 1966 Victoria Confederate Monument 1912 Pompeo Coppini s statue called The Last Stand and sometimes The Firing Line sits in De Leon Plaza The inscription reads On civilization s height Immutable they stand The 5 000 cost was raised by the United Daughters of the Confederacy Private monuments edit nbsp Confederate Veterans Memorial Plaza Palestine TexasAustin Confederate monument Oakwood Cemetery Erected in 2016 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans 518 Belton Monument to Confederate Sargeant Jacob Hemphill Erected 2016 by Sons of Confederate Veterans 519 Crowley Confederate Veterans Memorial Monument honoring The Confederate Veterans of Crowley and the surrounding area interred at the Crowley Cemetery Erected 2011 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans 519 Hempstead The Liendo Plantation was a center for Confederate recruiting efforts and held Union prisoners during the war Now it holds battle reenactments and demonstrations of Civil War era Confederate life at its annual Civil War Weekend Orange The Confederate Memorial of the Wind located on Martin Luther King Jr Drive but visible from I 10 has been under construction since 2013 and will be the largest Confederate monument built since 1916 according to the Sons of Confederate Veterans 441 A center stone ring is held aloft by 13 pillars one for each state that seceded There are twenty commemorative flagpoles Palestine Confederate Veterans Memorial Plaza 2013 funded by the Sons of the Confederate Veterans 520 Inhabited places edit Counties edit Further information List of counties in Texas Brewster County 1887 named for Henry Percy Brewster Culberson County 1911 named for CSA Lieutenant Colonel David B Culberson Donley County 1882 named for Stockton P Donley a lawyer who enlisted in the Confederate Army Just after the war in 1866 he was elected to the Supreme Court of Texas but was removed by the Reconstruction military government Ector County 1891 named for CSA General Mathew Ector who later served as a judge Foard County 1891 named for Robert L Foard an attorney and Confederate Major 521 Gray County 1902 named for Peter W Gray a lawyer and legislator who attended the 1861 Texas State Secession Convention and voted to leave the union Shortly after Gray was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives Gregg County 1873 named for CSA General John Gregg who was a delegate to the Texas Secession Convention in 1861 and was elected to represent Texas in the Provisional Confederate Congress in Montgomery Alabama and later in Richmond Virginia He was killed in action at the Siege of Petersburg in 1864 Hemphill County and Hemphill city 1877 named for John Hemphill Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court from 1841 to 1858 until he was elected to the US Senate when Sam Houston refused to support secession He was expelled from the Senate when Texas seceded in 1861 and then represented Texas in the Provisional Confederate Congress Hood County 1866 named for CSA General John Bell Hood Jeff Davis County 1887 named for Jefferson Davis Lee County 1874 named for Robert E Lee Lubbock County named for CSA colonel Thomas Saltus Lubbock Madison County In 2020 County Commissioners designated April as Confederate History and Heritage Month 448 McCulloch County for CSA general Benjamin McCulloch Ochiltree County 1889 named for secessionist politician William Beck Ochiltree Oldham County 1881 named for William Simpson Oldham Sr a Confederate politician Randall County 1889 named for CSA Brig Gen Horace Randal Reagan County 1903 named for CSA Postmaster General John H Reagan Reeves County 1884 named for CSA officer George R Reeves Roberts County 1889 named for Oran Milo Roberts who was unanimously elected president of the 1861 Secession Convention a meeting that he had been influential in calling In 1862 he resigned the Supreme Court seat and was elected colonel of the Eleventh Texas infantry in the Confederate Army He was Governor of Texas from 1879 to 1883 Scurry County 1884 named for secessionist and CSA Gen William Read Scurry Starr County Confederate official James Harper Starr Stephens County originally Buchanan County for U S President James Buchanan in 1861 was renamed for CSA Vice President Alexander Stephens Stonewall County 1888 named for CSA General Stonewall Jackson Sutton County 1890 named for CSA officer John S Sutton Terrell County 1905 named for CSA acting General Alexander W Terrell Terry County 1904 named for CSA Col Benjamin Franklin Terry Tom Green County 1875 named for CSA Brig Gen Thomas Green KIA killed in action Upton County 1910 named for brothers John C and William F Upton both colonels in the Confederate Army Val Verde County 1885 Confederate victory in the Battle of Val Verde Winkler County 1910 named for CSA Col Clinton M Winkler Municipalities edit City of Cleburne 1871 City of Fort Davis named for Jefferson Davis City of Granbury 1887 City of Hemphill named for judge and Confederate politician John Hemphill see Hemphill County as well City of Lubbock named for Thomas Saltus Lubbock a colonel in the Confederate Army City of Robert Lee City of Stonewall named for Stonewall Jackson Museums edit See also Texas Confederate Museum Columbus Confederate Memorial Museum Located in an unusual building built in 1883 that formerly was the town s water tower and in the base its Fire Station It is a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark Curated by UDC which purchased the building from the town in 1926 when its water system was modernized and the unneeded tower building put up for sale 522 According to the UDC it holds a collection of artifacts from Civil War soldiers of Columbus and Colorado County It is a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark dedicated according to UDC to the veterans of all wars although the museum holds only Confederate artifacts 523 White Settlement Texas Civil War Museum opened 2006 It is pro Confederacy 524 and the UDC has permanently one of the three seats on its board Has material from the former Texas Confederate Museum in Austin which closed in 1988 Parks edit Confederate Reunion Grounds State Historic Site Limestone County near Mexia Texas Davis Mountains State Park 1938 named for the mountain range Davis Mountains geographic feature in West Texas around and named for Fort Davis Fort Worth Jefferson Davis Park 525 now Unity Park Holliday Stonewall Jackson Campground Lakeside Tarrant County Confederate Park The two Confederate flags displayed on each side of the park s marker were removed by the Texas Department of Public Transportation in 2017 Marker text Site of Confederate Park Local businessman Khleber M Van Zandt organized the Robert E Lee Camp of the United Confederate Veterans in 1889 By 1900 it boasted more than 700 members The Club received a 25 year charter to create the Confederate Park Association in 1901 then purchased 373 acres 151 ha near this site for the recreation refuge and relief of Confederate soldiers and their families Opening events included a picnic for veterans and families on June 20 1902 and a statewide reunion September 8 12 1902 with 3 500 attendees The park thrived as a center for the civil and social activities on Texas Confederate organizations By 1924 the numbers sic of surviving veterans had greatly diminished and the Confederate Park Association dissolved when its charter expired in 1926 525 Palestine John H Reagan ParkRoads edit Austin In July 2018 at approximately the same time that Robert E Lee Road and Jeff Davis Avenue were renamed the city s Equity Office recommended changing the names of seven more streets Littlefield Street Commemorates George W Littlefield a CSA officer 526 Tom Green Street 526 Sneed Cove named for Richard A Sneed Confederate soldier and co founder of the Ku Klux Klan 526 Reagan Hill Drive 526 Dixie Drive 526 Plantation Road 526 Confederate Avenue 526 Conroe Beauregard Drive Jubal Early Lane Stonewall Jackson Drive El Paso Robert E Lee Road now Buffalo Soldier Road Hamilton Stonewall Jackson Road Hillsboro Confederate Drive Hemphill Confederate Street Stonewall Street Holliday Stonewall Road Houston Robert E Lee Road now Unison Road Robert Lee Road Sul Ross St Named for Lawrence Sullivan Ross Confederate general and former president of Texas A amp M University Tuam Street a major artery named for CSA Gen Dowling s birthplace Tuam Ireland Hunt Robert E Lee Road Jacksonville Jeff Davis Street Kermit East Winkler Street Lakeside Confederate Park Road League City Jeb Stuart Drive Levelland Robert Lee Street Liberty Confederate Street Livingston Robert E Lee Road Marshall Jeff Davis Street Stonewall Drive Missouri City Beauregard Court Bedford Forrest Drive Breckinridge Court Confederate Drive Pickett Place Richmond Jeb Stuart Drive Jeff Davis Drive Stonewall Drive Ridgley Bedford Forrest Lane Roma Robert Lee Avenue San Antonio Beauregard Street Robert E Lee Drive Sterling City Robert Lee Highway Sweetwater Robert Lee Street Tyler Jeb Stuart Drive Jeff Davis Drive Victoria Robert E Lee Road Note There are similarly named streets in towns and cities across east Texas notably Port Arthur and Beaumont as well as memorials to Dowling and the Davis Guards not least at Sabine Pass where the battleground is now preserved as a state park Schools edit Abilene Jackson Elementary School now Dr Jose Alcorta Sr Elementary School Johnston Elementary School now Eugene Purcell Elementary School Lee Elementary School 1961 95 now Robert and Sammye Stafford Elementary School Amarillo Lee Elementary School was renamed Park Hills Elementary School in 2019 95 Tascosa High School Confederacy iconography was dropped in 1974 The school dropped its mascot Johnny Reb and stopped playing Dixie as their fight song The Dixieland Singers became the Freedom Singers Miss Southern Belle became Tascosa Belle The Rebel nickname remained but other ties to the Civil War disappeared 527 Austin John H Reagan Early College High School 1965 now Northeast Early College High School William B Travis High School home of the Rebels 528 Dropped Dixie as its song in 2012 529 Zachary Taylor Fulmore Middle School now Sarah Beth Lively Middle School Sidney Lanier High School Sidney Lanier poet of the Confederacy was a private in the Confederate Army 530 now Juan Navarro High School Johnston High School Named for Albert Sidney Johnston Confederate general killed in the Battle of Shiloh The school closed in 2008 Eastside Memorial High School is now 2017 at that location 530 Bryan Sul Ross Elementary School Named for Lawrence Sullivan Ross Confederate general and former president of Texas A amp M University 531 Buda Jack C Hays High School The school uses the Rebel nickname for its athletic teams 532 Mascot Colonel Jack no longer has a Confederate flag belt buckle but still dresses in grey The school dropped the Confederate flag as an official symbol in 2010 and the school district banned it from all district property in 2012 533 In 2015 it replaced the school song Dixie Baytown Lee College 1934 Lee High School 1928 nbsp Stonewall Jackson Elementary School DallasDallas Albert Sidney Johnston Elementary School now Cedar Crest Elementary School John H Reagan Elementary School now Bishop Arts STEAM Academy Robert E Lee Elementary School now Geneva Heights Elementary School Stonewall Jackson Elementary School 1939 now Mockingbird Elementary School Sidney Lanier Expressive Arts Vanguard Elementary School now Jesus Moroles Expressive Arts Vanguard Elementary School Denton Lee Elementary School 1988 renamed Alice Moore Alexander Elementary School in 2017 95 Eagle Pass Robert E Lee Elementary School now Juan N Seguin Elementary School Edinburg Lee Elementary School 95 El Paso Lee Elementary School 95 now Sunrise Mountain Elementary School Evadale Evadale High School The school uses a Confederate flag inspired crest Its athletic teams are nicknamed the Rebels 534 Fort Davis Fort Davis AEC School Fort Davis High School Gainesville Robert E Lee Intermediate School now Gainesville Intermediate School Grand Prairie Robert E Lee Elementary School 1948 now Delmas F Morton Elementary School Houston Davis High School 1926 In 2016 the Houston school board voted to rename the school 535 now Northside High School Dowling Middle School 1968 named for CSA Maj Richard W Dowling In 2016 the Houston school board voted to rename the school 535 now Audrey H Lawson Middle School Thomas Stonewall Jackson Middle School to Yolanda Black Navarro Middle School of Excellence Sydney Lanier Confederate poet and soldier In 2016 the Houston school board voted to rename the school, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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