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struggle4progress

(118,237 posts)
Wed Oct 18, 2017, 07:37 PM Oct 2017

Lexington KY Removes Confederate Statues

by KARA TAYLOR

... Monuments to former U.S. Vice President John C. Breckinridge and Confederate General John Hunt Morgan had stood in downtown Lexington for more than 130 years.

... just days after a rally .. turned violent in Charlottesville, .. Lexington Fayette-Urban County Council leaders voted to relocate the statues ... However, the city previously said the Kentucky Military Heritage Commission had to approve the decision ...

Attorney General Andy Beshear advised the mayor’s office on Tuesday that the removal could occur without the consent of the commission ...

The unexpected removal occurred around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday ...

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/lexington-removes-confederate-statues-after-attorney-general-oks-jurisdiction-n811951

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Lexington KY Removes Confederate Statues (Original Post) struggle4progress Oct 2017 OP
Statues put up to rewrite history, needed to come down struggle4progress Oct 2017 #1
So if this is correct: "a cavalry raider who burned towns and stole horses", guillaumeb Oct 2017 #2

struggle4progress

(118,237 posts)
1. Statues put up to rewrite history, needed to come down
Wed Oct 18, 2017, 07:42 PM
Oct 2017

BY TOM EBLEN
OCTOBER 18, 2017 9:03 AM

... A bronze statue of John C. Breckinridge, a former U.S. vice president whose last public role was as the Confederate Secretary of War, had stood .. in Lexington’s public square since 1887. More than two decades after the Civil War ended, the United Daughters of the Confederacy .. persuaded Kentucky legislators that it was a good use of $10,000 of taxpayer money.

Confederate Gen. John Hunt Morgan, a cavalry raider who burned towns and stole horses, was honored nearby with a bronze equestrian statue in 1911, nearly five decades after the Civil War ended. When the memorial group could raise only half the statue’s $15,000 cost, state officials used taxpayer money for the other half ...

s night fell Tuesday, a crane moved Breckinridge onto a truck bed, where he was wrapped in a blue protective tarp. Workers next turned their attention to Morgan. As police surrounded the site, dozens of people gathered to watch, including members of the citizens group Take Back Cheapside ...

... It wasn’t rewriting history, but taking the first steps toward making history more accurate and complete.

http://www.kentucky.com/news/local/news-columns-blogs/tom-eblen/article179459721.html

guillaumeb

(42,641 posts)
2. So if this is correct: "a cavalry raider who burned towns and stole horses",
Wed Oct 18, 2017, 08:06 PM
Oct 2017

a horse stealing arsonist was honored with a statue?

Heritage?
Pride?
Truly?

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