Ownership of Richmond's Confederate monuments will transfer to Black History Museum

'Symbols matter,' said Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam

Gov. Ralph Northam, D-Va., and Democratic Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney announced Thursday that state and city governments had reached an agreement to transfer the ownership of the city's recently removed Confederate monuments to the Black History Museum.

The museum intends to partner with The Valentine and other cultural institutions in Richmond to "determine the proper future use of each piece in the collection," according to a Thursday press release from the City of Richmond. The museum will also receive the empty pedestals on which the statues stood.

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The city's monument of Confederate Gen. A.P. Hill will not be transferred to the museum because his remains are buried beneath it.

The time capsules recently uncovered in the Lee monument are also not included the transfer to the museum, according to Greg Werkheiser, a founding partner of Cultural Heritage Partners, advisors to the Black History Museum and the Valentine.

"The Department of Historic Resources is still figuring out exactly what’s in them, how to preserve them," Werkheiser said, according to a local NBC affiliate. "That process is going to take some time, so no one is ready to decide just yet what happens to those."

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"Symbols matter, and for too long, Virginia’s most prominent symbols celebrated our country’s tragic division and the side that fought to keep alive the institution of slavery by any means possible," Northam said. "Now it will be up to our thoughtful museums, informed by the people of Virginia, to determine the future of these artifacts, including the base of the Lee Monument which has taken on special significance as protest art."

Protesters with shields and gas masks wait for police action as they surround the statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue, Tuesday June 23, 2020, in Richmond, Virginia. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

"Entrusting the future of these monuments and pedestals to two of our most respected institutions is the right thing to do," said Stoney. "They will take the time that is necessary to properly engage the public and ensure the thoughtful future uses of these artifacts, while we reimagine Monument Avenue, focus on telling our history fully and accurately in places like Shockoe Bottom and lift up residents throughout the city."

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Following the death of George Floyd in summer 2020, Stoney ordered likenesses along Monument Avenue of Confederate Gens. J.E.B. Stuart and Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson removed, as well as those of Confederate Naval commander Matthew Fontaine Murray. Protesters had earlier toppled a statue of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia, on July 10, 2020. (AP Photo/Steve Helber, File)

Court litigation had delayed the Lee statue's removal because it was on state-owned land, but it was also eventually removed on Sept. 8.

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Earlier this month, the city council of Charlottesville, Virginia, voted unanimously in favor of donating their city's controversial Lee statue to an African American heritage center, which planned to melt down the statue and turn into a piece of public art.

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