A few
months ago, St. Louis had its own Confederate statue controversy. A
memorial to the Confederate war dead was erected in 1914 in Forest Park,
our big municipal park that contains a golf course, tennis courts,
miscellaneous buildings, the St. Louis Art Museum, The St. Louis Zoo, and the
Missouri History Museum. I didn’t know
the park had a Confederate memorial; according to polls, neither did 90 percent
of the metropolitan population.
The new
mayor, elected this spring, saw her main political opponent start a Go Fund Me
campaign to remove the statue (the city’s finances are so bad it couldn’t
afford to move it). The mayor’s first act in office was to fire the police
chief (that was another controversy). The second was to get out ahead of the
political opponent’s campaign against the statue. Eventually, after the threat
of a suit over ownership, the statue was moved, and given to the Civil War Museum
at Jefferson Barracks, a national cemetery in St. Louis County.
Politics
is complicated. What looks like one thing on the surface turns out to be
something else.
The statue of Francis Blair in Forest Park |
History is
also complicated. A popular saying these days is “being on the right side of
history.” That is not a historical statement. That’s an ideological statement,
most commonly heard from the left side of the political spectrum. A similar
statement is “winners write history.” Given how many Southerners have written
history books about the Civil War, that’s clearly not true. The South lost the
Civil War, but a lot of Southerners have written and continue to write its history.
We have
another statue in Forest Park that so far has received very little attention. Francis P.
Blair, Jr. was the son of a newspaper owner, a congressman, a solider, a
general in the Civil War, and a U.S. Senator. He was anti-slavery and a staunch
supporter of Abraham Lincoln in the election of 1860. He played a critical role
in keeping Missouri, a slave state, in the Union at the outbreak of the war –
and it was a very near thing.
What could
be controversial about Francis Blair?
Francis Blair |
A lot, as
it turns out. He opposed the Republicans Reconstruction
policy, and abandoned the Republican Party because of it. In 1868, he was on
the Democratic ticket for vice president, paired with Horatio Seymour
against Republican war hero Ulysses S. Grant.
Blair unwittingly played a role in helping elect his opponents – in a series of
speeches, he framed the election in strictly racial (and racist) terms,
claiming that newly emancipated slaves wanted to attack white women, among
several other similar claims.
But he has
his
statue in Forest Park, and so far, it’s been left alone. History is indeed
complicated.
That’s my
biggest complaint in this ongoing controversy about statues. The news media
frame the stories in cartoon-like terms, as if the rest of us are incapable of
seeing and understanding complexity and nuance, so they have to tell us in large
and usually distorting pictures. This used to be true
only of television news. Now it’s come to include newspapers as well.
In all of its coverage, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch never once mentioned the contemporary municipal politics involved in the Confederate statue debate. It did, however, acknowledge that the newspaper hailed the statue in an editorial when it was erected in 1914. Times change, and the Post-Dispatch wants to be on the right side of history.
In all of its coverage, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch never once mentioned the contemporary municipal politics involved in the Confederate statue debate. It did, however, acknowledge that the newspaper hailed the statue in an editorial when it was erected in 1914. Times change, and the Post-Dispatch wants to be on the right side of history.
One personal
benefit of the debate about Confederate statues and the Civil War – I’ve
started reading historical accounts of the conflict. Bruce Catton’s Centennial
History of the Civil War, published in three volumes from 1961-1965, is
still a good resource. So is James McPherson’s Battle
Cry of Freedom, published in 1989 and which won the Pulitzer Prize.
Just about anything by T.
Harry Williams, one of the best Civil War historians who ever lived, is
worthwhile.
An illustration of the Battle of Liberty Place |
I grew up
in New Orleans, and I was surprised earlier this year to find out that there were no fewer than
four Confederate statues in the city. The only one I was familiar with was the
one of Robert E. Lee in Lee Circle. I have never seen (or remembered) the one on
Canal Street commemorating the so-called “Battle of Liberty Place,” when the
White Citizens League attacked the U.S. Customs House in 1874. I only knew
about the event because my father had a
book about the history of what happened and what resulted – but I didn’t realize
there was a monument to it.
The New
Orleans Times-Picayune’s coverage of the
controversies grossly
oversimplified what “The Battle of Liberty Place” was actually about. The coverage left out the outrage over Republican and military corruption and the outright theft of the state and city elections of 1874, which were far more significant contributors to the attack on the Customs House.
Speaking
of Go Fund Me and Change.org sites, there is, according to Billboard
Magazine, a move afoot to replace the Confederate statues in New Orleans
with statues of Britney Spears. I am not making this up. When I last looked, some 6,400 people had
signed it. I’m trying to imagine “Britney Spears Circle” on St. Charles Avenue.
I’m trying to imagine replacing a historical figure with a pop culture figure.
Somehow,
that would fit the times we live in.
Related:
Duty,
Dishonor, and the South – Rod Dreher at American Conservative.
Charlottesville, Confederate Memorials, and Southern Culture – John Piper at Desiring God.
Charlottesville, Confederate Memorials, and Southern Culture – John Piper at Desiring God.
Top photo: The Confederate Memorial now removed from Forest Park.
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