September 18, 2017
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
The Reasons Historic Monuments Go Up, and the American
Historical Association’s Statement
==============================================
Friends,
The
convulsive push to rid our public places of anything reminding passersby of the
Confederacy or of figures associated with it, continues unabated. But as the manic
and zealous rage to cleanse our society of those monuments and symbols
progresses, it is becoming unmistakably clear that it is not only the icons
memorializing Confederates which have become targets—It is anything, anyone,
any symbol, in our past that can be accused of being tinged with “racism,” an
increasingly amorphous term broadly applied to characterize most of our history,
that is now in the cross hairs.
Mainstream
political and cultural leaders, various members of the historical profession,
and others assure us that it is only Confederate monuments that must go; that
is, those to the most egregious racists, those to defenders of
institutionalized slavery. Symbols for other figures, such as George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Andrew Jackson will, they assure us, remain
on their pedestals because, as they state it, “they helped build up our nation,
while the Confederates tried to tear it down.”
Yet,
such logic belies the flow of events and fails to understand both the
self-consuming, ideological zeal of those pushing for a total “purification,”
and the irrepressible logic of their historical argument. If “racism” (and thus
the “iconography honoring racists”) is
the central and all-encompassing theme of American history, and if it is by
definition “evil” and unacceptable, then how is it possible to continue
honoring slaveholders like Washington or Jefferson, even if they were critical to
the creation of the American republic? Indeed, does not this call into question
the very foundation of the nation, itself?
This
radical approach all along has been the template of cultural Marxism: America,
from its very inception, has been and continues to be a racist nation, a
country ineradicably stained by racism, as well as by sexism, homophobia, and a
host of other sins. A continual and ongoing cleansing must occur, they declare.
Successive acts of reparation and compensation must transpire, but, even then,
the ingrained guilt will never completely disappear. Half-measures—such as the
removal of only Confederate
monuments—advocated by various mainstream politicians, will never satisfy this
argument. For this argument succumbs to the logic of the cultural extremists:
one cannot choose which racists to
honor and which ones to dismiss. A racist is a racist according to this line of
thinking, and arguably the role of Washington, Jefferson and the Framers in
enshrining slavery in our constitutional system is far more grievous than an
unsuccessful military effort by disaffected Southerners.
The
fatal weakness and flaw in all such temporization, in the argumentation of those
who attempt to distinguish between memorials to Confederates and those to
Washington or Jefferson, is that somehow they believe they can advance down the
path of Revolution part of the way without accepting the final conclusions and
outcome. History is filled with the carcasses of those who thought the same way,
who failed to understand that once you accept the revolutionary line of
thinking, you remain imprisoned by it.
Even
the charge advanced by the temporizers—the accusation that Confederate
iconography is an especially blatant and hurtful symbol of racism—demands
closer inspection. They assert that those who erected the hundreds of memorials
to Confederates a century and more ago, did so not so much to honor those
veterans, but rather to symbolize the triumph of “white supremacy,” segregation
and Jim Crow. Yet, a closer reading of
the orations given at the countless dedicatory ceremonies, of the newspaper
articles that accompanied those events, and of correspondence surrounding that
history, reveal that by far the underlying sentiment was to honor the veterans
and others who suffered, fought and died decades earlier.
Throughout
our history, usually forty or fifty years after the conclusion of each war or
conflict, there are efforts to honor the old veterans who are quickly passing
away. In the more distant realms of memory, the events and histories of young
men become the reverie of old soldiers. And the desire is to memorialize in
stone or bronze not just those events and that history, but those grizzled men
before they die.
Thus
it was after World War II and most recently, forty years after Vietnam—an
excellent example, among many, being the recent erection of the monument to
Vietnam veterans on the Capitol Square in Raleigh, North Carolina. Forty-five
years ago the returning veterans from Vietnam came home, looked down upon by
large portions of American society, even despised and in shame. That this view
has changed in four decades, that those vets are now viewed differently, and
that they are beginning to pass away are reasons such monuments have gone up—not
racist sentiment against the “Viet Cong.”
Certainly,
searching the wealth of documentation surrounding the erection of monuments to
Confederate veterans you may find an occasional reference to the “white race”
or something similar; just as in the publicity and discussion surrounding a
World War II monument or Vietnam vets statue, you may locate a reference to
“suppressing the Japs” or “killing the Cong.”
But, by far, the discussion is about honoring sacrifice, honoring the
dead, memorializing the citizens who were caught up in a cruel and bloody
conflict that affected them and forever changed their lives.
Dr.
Brion McClanahan has an essay taking aim at a recent statement issued by the
American Historical Association. Many years ago, as a grad student at the
University of Virginia, I was a member, but even then, I understood that the
AHA had an evolving, highly political and ideological agenda, driven by a
growing cultural Marxist presence that had successfully invaded the
organization. I left after just one year. A few years on, the late Professor
Eugene Genovese, perhaps the pre-eminent historian of the Old South, was so
disillusioned by the Leftist politicization of the organization, that he and
several other non-Marxist historians began a new association, The Historical
Society.
The
AHA has continued its ideological juggernaut through the historical profession,
and it is thus truly illustrative of the totalitarian mindset that now
dominates most of academia.
It
is no surprise to see their statement on Confederate monuments and what it
says; but Brion’s critique is a superb rejoinder—and I encourage everyone to
read it and forward it on.
AHA Revisionism By Brion McClanahan (9-6-17) https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/blog/aha-revisionism/
On 28 August
2017, the American Historical Association (AHA) issued a “Statement on
Confederate Monuments” that presumed to speak for the entire American historical
profession on the issue of whether these monuments should remain or if they
should be removed from public spaces.
Unfortunately
this “statement” is little more than historical establishment claptrap
disguised as highbrow intellectual discourse—par for the course in the modern
profession—replete with distortions, exaggerations, half-truths, and presentism
myths. The “statement” opens by suggesting that the AHA “welcomes the emerging
national debate about Confederate monuments…” but suggests that “Much of this
public statuary was erected without such conversations, and without any public
decision-making process.” The
“statement” later concludes by asserting that “Nearly all monuments to the
Confederacy and its leaders were erected without anything resembling a
democratic process. Regardless of their representation in the actual population
in any given constituency, African Americans had no voice and no opportunity to
raise questions about the purposes or likely impact of the honor accorded to
the builders of the Confederate States of America.”
Both arguments
are disingenuous at best. The “public statuary” in question did involve
conversations both North and South, not just about Confederate monuments, but
about general American iconography, and every monument involved some type of
“public decision-making process.” Nearly all of the funds raised for Southern
monuments came from private donations. Women’s organizations sought pennies to
help fund relief enterprises, including finding artificial limbs for
Confederate veterans. They also hoped to erect monuments for the dead.
Republican controlled governments, military occupation, and lack of capital put
off many of these projects until the several years after the War, but by the 1870s,
monuments to Confederate soldiers began appearing in towns and cities across
the South. One of the first was constructed of wood in Columbus, Georgia’s
Linwood Cemetery. In fact, the vast majority of these monuments were erected in
cemeteries until the turn of the twentieth century, but even as the monuments
began to be placed in public locations, most were dedicated to the common
Confederate soldier, not individuals.
But this was not
just a Southern movement. Across the United States during the Gilded Age and
Progressive Era, Union veterans organizations began constructing monuments as
well, and these, like their Southern counterparts, focused on the heroism and
sacrifice of the Union dead. There was no animus between erstwhile foes. New
Yorker Cornelius Vanderbilt, at the insistence of his Southern wife Frank,
funded several charitable causes that benefitted exclusively Confederate
veterans. By the early twentieth-century, some Northern monuments had the
financial backing of the federal government. The now vilified Stone Mountain
carving in Georgia had to rely on private donations while the more famous Mount
Rushmore carving in South Dakota had federal funding. Northern and Southern
taxpayers subsidized the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. while the monument
to Jefferson Davis in Richmond was built by private donations. All were part of
public beautification projects in a progressive effort to reconcile the
sections.
Booker T.
Washington thought these memorials and monuments were worthwhile. In 1914, he
agreed to help find funding for the Confederate monument in Opelika, AL, saying
that, “We all realize more and more that men like him [Confederate Veteran
George Paul Harrison, Jr.] are true friends of our race, and that any monument
that will keep the fine character of such heroes before the public will prove
helpful to both races in the South.” Washington was African-American and both
had a voice and “an opportunity to raise questions about the purposes or likely
impact of the honor accorded to the builders of the Confederate States of
America.” He made clear he thought such monuments would “prove helpful to both
races in the South.” Black Americans often attended unveiling events and when
Jefferson Davis and John B. Gordon traveled through Alabama and Georgia after
the cornerstone ceremony for the large Confederate sculpture in Montgomery,
thousands of black Southerners lined up to see the procession.
The AHA
“statement” contends that, “History comprises both facts and interpretations of
those facts. To remove a monument, or to change the name of a school or street,
is not to erase history, but rather to alter or call attention to a previous
interpretation of history.” Curiously, the “statement” then argues, “A monument
is not history itself; a monument commemorates an aspect of history,
representing a moment in the past when a public or private decision defined who
would be honored in a community’s public spaces.”
Part of this is
true. History is interpretation, and the AHA is willfully engaging in a bit of
historical revisionism in its “statement.” The AHA correctly states that most
of the monuments were built in the decades after the War, but then claims,
“this enterprise was part and parcel of the initiation of legally mandated
segregation and widespread disenfranchisement [sic] across the South. Memorials
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.” For an organization that insists all
statements like this should be “rooted in evidence and disciplinary standards,”
they fall far short of meeting their own objectives.
In the hundreds
if not thousands of memorial address, dedication ceremonies, and public events
held to unveil a monument or commemorate the Confederacy in the postbellum
South, very few spoke of “white supremacy” or the attempt to “terrorize” and
“intimidate African Americans politically and isolate them from the mainstream
of public life.” Memorial addresses spoke of the heroism and sacrifice of the
soldier, the dedication of Southern women, and the principles of liberty and
independence, and most expressed satisfaction that slavery had been abolished
for the good of humanity.
For example, at
the 1915 cornerstone ceremony for the Stonewall Jackson monument in Richmond,
VA, William A. Anderson, a Lexington, VA native, Confederate veteran, and
member of the Stonewall Brigade, said that the Jackson statue would memorialize
“The example which he [Jackson] gave the world of self-sacrificing devotion to
principle and to country, of loyal obedience to duty, and unquestioning faith
in God, the unsurpassed manifestations of courage which he exhibited, and the
radiance with which his genius illumined the fields of his triumphs….” Anderson
believed these traits would “compel the admiration alike of friend and foe, and
constitute a part of the patrimony of glory, not of Virginia and the
Confederate South alone, but of the American people and the human race.”
As to the
statement that such monuments are “not history,” that defies the value of such
monuments as works of art. Is the Lincoln Memorial only a “monument?” What
about Mount Rushmore? Or the Washington Monument? Do they not constitute something
other than a monument? The AHA stands behind the Washington Monument and would
not want to see it removed to “a museum or some other appropriate venue” as in
the case of Confederate monuments. The AHA further thinks “Americans can also
learn from other countries’ approaches to these difficult issues, such
as…Memento Park in Budapest, Hungary.” Most Americans would not recognize the
loaded symbolism of this statement. Memento Park is filled with statues and
monuments to the Soviet Union and communism. In other words, Confederate
monuments are as illegitimate as the Soviet empire, as bloody as Marxism, and
constitute a foreign part of American history. They are not American. No bias
there.
Perhaps the most
bizarre section of the “statement” is where the AHA contends that, “Decisions
to remove memorials to Confederate generals and officials who have no other
major historical accomplishment does not necessarily create a slippery slope
towards removing the nation’s founders, former presidents, or other historical
figures whose flaws have received substantial publicity in recent years.” This
is simply not true. On the contrary, see attacks made on
the George Washington and Andrew Jackson statues in New Orleans, the attempt to
rename James Madison
High School in Wisconsin, the vandalism of a
Christopher Columbus statue in New
York, calls for the
removal of the Thomas Jefferson statue at UVA, or the actual removal
of the Richard Stockton bust at Stockton University. And this is
only the beginning. No slippery slope? The AHA is delusional or maybe just overtly
political. This part of the statement could have been written by
“distinguished” historian Annette Gordon-Reed, whose pseudo-history of the
(debunked) Jefferson-Hemings affair earned her a Pulitzer Prize. (See the Jefferson
Hemings Scholars Commission.) Gordon-Reed laughs at the
idea that the founding generation is next because “We can distinguish
between people who wanted to build the United States of America and people who
wanted to destroy it….” Never mind that many of the prominent leaders of the
Confederacy were descendants of Southern founders and that the United States
continued to exist in 1861 even without the Southern states. To Reed and other
“distinguished” members of the AHA, Confederate leaders and veterans are not
worthy of recognition.
I have never
joined the AHA, and I would encourage other historians who take issue with
their recent “statement” to reconsider sending another dime to a historical
organization that clearly cares little for “evidence and disciplinary
standards” in its own publications.
Brion McClanahan is the author or
co-author of five books, 9 Presidents Who Screwed Up
America and Four Who Tried to Save Her (Regnery History, 2016), The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Founding Fathers, (Regnery,
2009), The Founding Fathers Guide to
the Constitution (Regnery
History, 2012), Forgotten Conservatives in
American History (Pelican,
2012), andThe
Politically Incorrect Guide to Real American Heroes, (Regnery,
2012). He received a B.A. in History from Salisbury University in 1997 and an
M.A. in History from the University of South Carolina in 1999. He finished his
Ph.D. in History at the University of South Carolina in 2006. He lives in
Alabama with his wife and three daughters.
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