Statue of Historic South Carolinian To Come Down in Charleston
Charleston was removing a symbol of its legacy on Wednesday, with crews working through the night to take away a statue honoring John C. Calhoun, an early U.S. vice president whose defense of slavery led the nation toward civil war.
But the larger-than-life figure of Calhoun — known as “The Cast-Iron Man” in the early 1800s for his unbending support for Southern states’ rights — was proving difficult to dislodge.
After a nightlong struggle, contractors decided to bring in a diamond cutter to cut through a metal shaft securing the statue to a pedestal that towers more than 100 feet over a downtown square along Calhoun Street.
Charleston’s council and mayor voted unanimously Tuesday to move it to “an appropriate site where it will be protected and preserved,” the latest in a wave of statue removals around the world.
“I believe that we are setting a new chapter, a more equitable chapter, in our city’s history,” Mayor John Tecklenburg said. “We are making the right step. It’s just simply the right thing for us to do.”
Dozens of residents spoke for and against the statue at Tuesday’s council meeting.
Grace Clark, a Charlestonian who said her family has lived in the city since the late 18th century, asked them “to please not remove our history. Not all history is good but it is our history.”
Clark suggested a notion that city leaders had considered in the past: adding contextual information about Calhoun’s history with slavery, rather than taking down the monument.
“We are doing what we can to honor the black men and women. We’re Charlestonians. We’re South Carolinians. We’re better than this,” she said.
When Tecklenburg announced his plans a week earlier, dozens of protesters linked arms around the monument, shouting, “Take it down!” Some spray-painted the monument’s base; police said they made several arrests for vandalism.
The Calhoun Monument has stood since 1898 in the heart of downtown Charleston, towering over a sprawling square where locals and tourists alike enjoyed festivals.
But several event organizers said recently that they would no longer use the space while the statue remained.
Many enslaved Africans brought to North America came through the port city of Charleston, for which the city formally apologized in 2018.
The city’s resolution says many see the statue “as something other than a memorial to the accomplishments of a South Carolina native, but rather a symbol glorifying slavery and as such, a painful reminder of the history of slavery in Charleston.”
Calhoun’s support of slavery, which he called a “positive good,” never wavered. With his pro-slavery “Calhoun Doctrine,” he led the South toward secession before he died in 1850.
South Carolina’s Heritage Act protects historical monuments and building names, but the mayor said the monument is not on public property, nor does it commemorate one of the historical events listed in the act.
According to the National Parks Service, the city technically leases the land, which “is to be kept open forever as a parade ground for the Sumter Guards and the Washington Light Infantry.”
Thus far, Tecklenburg’s interpretation has not been legally disputed. A two-thirds General Assembly vote is required to make any changes under the Heritage Act, which happened in 2015 when the Confederate flag was removed from Statehouse grounds.
Gov. Henry McMaster described the Heritage Act on Tuesday as a “good state law” and a “deliberate process that is not influenced by passion and time.”
As for the mayor’s interpretation, he said, “It depends on how you read the Heritage Act, and there are people who read it in different ways.”
The Calhoun statue’s ultimate resting place will be decided by a special panel. The mayor anticipated it would go to a local museum or educational institution.
The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.
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