Statue of Supreme Court Justice Removed Along With Confederate Monuments in Baltimore in Overnight Operation

Ivan Pentchoukov
By Ivan Pentchoukov
August 16, 2017US News
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Statue of Supreme Court Justice Removed Along With Confederate Monuments in Baltimore in Overnight Operation
Baltimore city workers remove graffiti from the pedestal where a statue dedicated to Robert E. Lee and Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson stood Aug. 16, 2017, in Baltimore, Md. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Baltimore city contractors removed a statue depicting the fifth Chief Justice of the United States along with three Confederate monuments in an overnight operation that started on Tuesday, Aug. 15.

Workers used heavy machinery to tear the statues from their pedestals and load them onto trucks to be haled away. The move ends a year of indecision in Baltimore about relics to the city’s Confederate history, The Baltimore Sun reported.

It is unclear how the statue depicting Roger B. Taney was lumped in. Taney was the fifth chief justice of the United States and personally administered the oath of office to Abraham Lincoln. Although Taney’s views on race were in opposition to Lincoln’s, he never went South to join the Confederate states during the Civil War.

The removal was ordered by Mayor Catherine Pugh, a Democrat, and backed unanimously by the Baltimore City Council, which is made up entirely of Democrats.

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh talks about the late night removal of four statues, three of them confederate, in the city, on August 16, 2017 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh talks about the late night removal of four statues, three of them Confederate, in the city, on Aug. 16, 2017 in Baltimore, Md. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

According to Pugh, the nighttime operation was designed to prevent violence similar to that in Charlottesville, Virginia, over the weekend.

“I did not want to endanger people in my own city,” she said. “I had begun discussions with contractors and so forth about how long it would take to remove them. I am a responsible person, so we moved as quickly as we could. ”

Pugh, who watched the removal in person, said that the city has not made plans for what will happen next to the statues.

Workers load statues of Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson on a flatbed truck in the early hours of August 16, 2017 in Baltimore, Maryland. (ALEC MACGILLIS/AFP/Getty Images)
Workers load statues of Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson on a flatbed truck in the early hours of Aug. 16, 2017, in Baltimore, Md. (Alec Macgillis/AFP/Getty Images)

After the removal, the pedestals were quickly vandalized with spray painted anarchy symbols and the words “Black Lives Matter.”

The overnight removals in Baltimore were triggered by violent events in Charlottesville, Virginia, over the weekend, where clashes erupted over the removal of a Confederate statue.

In Baltimore, activists threatened to topple the Confederate statues unless officials acted quickly.

In addition to the Taney monument, the three confederate statues removed overnight were the Robert E. Lee and “Stonewall” Jackson Monument, the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument and the Confederate Women’s Monument.

The work to remove the monuments started at 11:30 p.m. on Tuesday and continued through the night till 5:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Joules, a passerby who did not give her last name, saw workers move the Robert E. Lee and “Stonewall” Jackson Monument at around 3:20 a.m.

“Way to be, Baltimore, sneaky style, and do it in the middle of the night,” she said.

Joules wanted to know where the monuments were being hauled away to and what will become of them.

“I feel like it’s a deep issue. They’re accurate, archived documentation of the position and rank of these two men. … But I’m not hee-hawing the Confederate flag,” she said. “Maybe it belongs in a Confederate cemetery.”

RELATED:

Communist Party Member Arrested for Confederate Statue Vandalism in Durham

Takiya Fatima Thompson. (Durham County Sheriff

Deputies arrested a 22-year-old member of the far-left communist Workers World Party on Tuesday, Aug. 15, and charged her with vandalism for toppling a Confederate statue in Durham on Monday, Fox News reported.

Takiya Fatima Thompson was seen bringing a ladder up to the Confederate Soldiers Monument in front of old courthouse as a crowd of rioters cheered. She then tied a rope around the nearly century-old statue to help topple it.

Several rioters then proceeded to kick and stomp the downed bronze statue, which depicts a soldier with a rifle. The work was commissioned in 1929.

A man who was marching in a protest poses on the toppled statue of a Confederate soldier in front of the old Durham County Courthouse in Durham, North Carolina, on Aug. 14, 2017. (REUTERS/Kate Medley)
A man who was marching in a protest on the toppled statue of a Confederate soldier in front of the old Durham County Courthouse in Durham, N.C., on Aug. 14, 2017. (Kate Medley/Reuters)

Thompson, a college student, now faces charges for vandalism, property damage, and rioting, according to the Durham County Sheriff’s Office.

Durham County Sheriff Mike Andrews said that he has identified several others involved in the vandalism and his deputies are now looking for the suspects to press criminal charges.

“Let me be clear, no one is getting away with what happened. We will find the people responsible,” Andrews said on Tuesday afternoon.

“We can all agree yesterday went too far. Yesterday was not the Durham that I know.”

North Carolina’s Democratic governor likewise condemned the vandalism.

“The racism and deadly violence in Charlottesville is unacceptable but there is a better way to remove these monuments,” Gov. Roy Copper wrote on Twitter.

A Sheriff
A Sheriff’s deputy near the toppled statue of a Confederate soldier in front of the old Durham County Courthouse in Durham, N.C., U.S. Aug. 14, 2017. (Kate Medley/Reuters)

The toppling of the statue in Durham on Monday was triggered by events in Charlottesville on Friday and Saturday. Members of various groups, including white nationalists, and neo-Nazis, gathered to protest the removal of a Confederate statue there. They were met with counterprotesters, some of whom were armed and violent members of the extremist Antifa organization.

Armed members of the Antifa extremist group wait outside Emancipation Park to hurl insults as members of various groups, including white nationalists and neo-Nazis, are forced out after the "Unite the Right" rally was declared an unlawful gathering August 12, 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Armed members of the Antifa extremist group wait outside Emancipation Park to hurl insults as members of various groups, including white nationalists and neo-Nazis, are forced out after the Unite the Right rally was declared an unlawful gathering Aug. 12, 2017, in Charlottesville, Va. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Clashes started on Friday and continued on Saturday, culminating in a car attack that killed one counterprotester and injured 19 others.

The communist Workers World Party, which Thompson is a member of, was founded in 1959. One of the organizational goals of the communists in America is to “discredit American culture by degrading all form of artistic expression,” according remark read into the Congressional Record, based on a book exposing the communist agenda in the United States.

One communist cell was told explicitly to “eliminate all good sculpture from parks and buildings,” replacing it with meaningless and shapeless forms.

 

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