The Jefferson Davis Monument - Knock it down, or do something else? [View all]
The Jefferson Davis Monument in Fairview, Kentucky (photo by Bartleby92, CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons)
In western Kentucky stands the tallest unreinforced concrete structure in the world, built as a tribute to a traitor. What should we do about it?
In the Western Kentucky town of Fairview stands a majestic pyramid-topped obelisk, constructed on a foundation of solid Kentucky limestone and reaching 351 feet above the ground. It is the fifth-tallest such structure in the United States, and the tallest unreinforced concrete structure in the world.
It is also a monument that pays tribute to a traitor who turned his back on his nation and participated in the death of 620,000 of his countrymen in our nations bloodiest conflict.
Were talking, of course, about Jefferson Davis, the Kentucky-born President of the Confederate States of America.
When I was a student at Western Kentucky University, I took odd pride as I drove past the towering structure on U.S. 68 through Fairview and on to Bowling Green, the so-called Confederate Capital of Kentucky. As a young white man, I viewed the monument as a historical piece of work that brought some attention to Kentucky as the birthplace of Davis. I never paused to think how Black people might feel at seeing such an ostentatious memorial built on the birth site of a man who sought to keep their great-great-grandfather enslaved. To me, at that time, it all seemed like ancient history blood under the bridge.
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https://forwardky.com/the-jefferson-davis-monument-knock-it-down-or-do-something-else/