Virginia

Virginia County to Move Confederate Statue to Battlefield

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA – AUGUST 22: The statue of a Confederate soldier and two Civil War cannons stand in front of the Albemarle County Court House on August 22, 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia. The Charlottesville city council voted unanimously on Tuesday to cover Confederate statues in black cloth. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

A Confederate soldier statue, cannons and cannonballs are being relocated to a battlefield in the Shenandoah Valley after they are removed on Saturday, officials said.

The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously at a special virtual meeting Tuesday to give the items to the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation, a historic-preservation group, The Daily Progress of Charlottesville reported.

State law requires that the board offer the statue for placement in a museum, historical society, government or battlefield, but the board ultimately has “sole authority” to decide where the items go.

The foundation was one of 10 applicants to receive the statue and its accessories, which the board had voted unanimously in August to remove.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam said Thursday that he’s working to let localities determine whether to relocate the more than 220 Confederate memorials in the state. “Right now we tell someone’s story. We don’t tell everyone’s story,” Alexandria City Councilman John Chapman said. News4’s Drew Wilder reports.

The county will livestream Saturday’s removal on its Facebook page in lieu of in-person observance because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The statue was erected in 1909 and paid for by the county, the city of Charlottesville and the United Daughters of the Confederacy. It sits in front of the courthouse on Albemarle property that was never annexed by the city.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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