Durham Statue Toppling

Durham Statue Toppling

Part of a series on Confederate Statue Removals Controversy. [View Related Entries]

Updated Nov 05, 2024 at 05:37PM EST by LiterallyAustin.

Added Aug 15, 2017 at 02:52PM EDT by Adam.

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Overview

Durham Statue Toppling refers to a protest in Durham, North Carolina in which protestors tore down a statue honoring the Confederate side in the United States Civil War. The event prompted strong reactions online as well as a series of jokes regarding the statue's crumpled form after it fell to the ground.

Background

On August 14th, 2017, two days after the 2017 Unite the Right Rally in which far-right protestors and white supremacists protested the removal of a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, leftist protestors in Durham, North Carolina tore down a statue outside of the old Durham County Courthouse honoring "the boys who wore the gray," referring to the uniform of the confederate army.[1] The statue had stood since 1924, 60 years after the Civil War, and was erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy.[4] The statue fell to the ground and crumpled (video shown below).


[This video has been removed]


Developments

Following the protest, reactions to the protestor's actions were mixed. Governor Roy Cooper of North Carolina suggested that there is a better way to have confederate monuments removed on Twitter.[2] Charlie Reece of the Durham City Council posted a popular tweet in which he received an email from a person asking him to consider removing the statue, along with his response that the statue no longer stood (shown below).[3] The tweet gained 4,000 retweets and over 13,000 likes.


Charlie Reece @CharlieReece Follow ) 、/ I get emails. l send emails in reply. RE: Please remove the Confederate statue 6:20 PM To Council Members With respect, I don't believe there is a Confederate statute in downtown Durham any longer Please consider removing the Confederate statue in downtown Durham Thank you. Best regards, Charlie Reece Nurham 9:38 PM-14 Aug 2017

Some conservatives were appalled by the event. The American Conservative[5] called the event a result of "mob rule," while more left-leaning publications framed the protestors as "heroic."[7] On August 15th, the Sheriff of Durham County Mike Andrews announced that he would be seeking charges on the protestors.[6]

Online Reactions

While some online echoed the appall of some conservatives, the majority of popular online reactions celebrated the protestors. Several popular tweets used the image of the crumpled statue as a reaction image, while others parodied conservative responses to the event by posting different statues, defending them as "conservative monuments" (examples shown below). These jokes were covered by The Fader.[7]


rob @YoungRobFlacko Follow me: this edible ain't s--- me, an hour later: MBA Youngboy @dreadcraft Follow Shorty gimme neck til I pass out Stefan Heck @boring as_heck Following Don't let them tear down this statue of a Confederate hero. Retweet if you love and respect General Joseph Paterno. JOSEPH VINCENT PATE EDUCATOR COAG HUMANITARIAN

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External References

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Top Comments

Mr. Candles
Mr. Candles

I wonder if this is going to escalate this conflict any more than it already has.
And I'm not sure I approve of toppling monuments in general. Pretty sure every nation out there has statues to heroes that today would qualify as goddamn war criminals and such. But… well, frankly, while this should not be happening, a fucking nazi march complete with vehicular attack on the counter-protest should not be happening either.
And if the ones that marched the other day are going to have an answer to this in the coming days, which will likely lead to further answers from both sides…

+61
hipnox
hipnox

how do we learn from the mistakes of the past if we destroy all visible remnants of it?

whether these are "apropiarte" for display in a public place is up for debate

but you cannot deny a part of a nations history, whether we agree with it or not, and it needs to be preserved.

+53

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