DC Officials Seek to Remove Statue of Confederate General

WASHINGTON — Eight D.C. elected officials have asked the National Park Service to remove a statute of a Confederate general from a parklet near Judiciary Square saying it commemorates an ideology with no place in the nation’s capital.

The letter dated Tuesday says that Albert Pike supported slavery and served as a brigadier general for the Confederate Army during the Civil War.

“We in the District of Columbia hold dear the values of equality, diversity and inclusion, which are in direct conflict with the values embodied by the statue of Albert Pike,” the letter states.

“In a time when these values are under constant attack by white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and far-right terrorists, the presence of a statue honoring Albert Pike only serves to perpetuate and incite hate, violence and oppression,” the letter states.

Seven members of the D.C. Council and Attorney General Karl Racine signed the letter, which comes amid a growing chorus of public officials across the country seeking to strip public parks and property of emblems of the nation’s Confederate past.

The statue sits on a grassy area adjacent to the Metropolitan Police Department headquarters on Indiana Avenue and 3rd Street.

Overnight, Baltimore removed several such statues from city property. And Maryland state officials are considering removal a statue of Supreme Court Justice Roger Taney, who penned the Dred Scott decision upholding slavery.

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