The South Needs to Commemorate Its Southern Unionists

The South Needs to Commemorate Its Southern Unionists

The historical amnesia of the South regarding its black and white Union soldiers should be rectified. By choosing to selectively remember and honor Confederate soldiers while simultaneously ignoring the many Southerners who fought for the Union, Southerners send clear message that loyalty to region, protection of white supremacy, and veneration of the Confederacy are the only legacies of the Civil War worth remembering. If Confederate monuments continue to be torn down, new ones should go up, celebrating those Southerners--black and white--who remained loyal to the Union and brought about “a new birth of freedom.”

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Looking for the American Dream: Lincoln Statues in the Great Depression

Looking for the American Dream: Lincoln Statues in the Great Depression

America is a nation dotted with monuments to its achievements and national heroes.  In this theme few individuals have been honored with as many monuments and memorials as Abraham Lincoln.  From local and state initiatives to the grand Lincoln Memorial that graces the National Mall, and has become a prime attraction in the United States Capital, Abraham Lincoln is heralded as one of our greatest presidents and a national icon.  Interestingly, Abraham Lincoln is also one of the only American figures whose youth is widely commemorated.  Even George Washington, the “Father of our Country,” has no statues dedicated to celebrating him as a child.  Lincoln is unique in the fact that his childhood remains a critical part of what made him a great national hero.  There are under a dozen statues to Lincoln as a youth and they were all completed in the early twentieth-century.  Six out of the nine statues were completed in the period between 1930 and 1944, the time of America’s Great Depression; two of these statues are featured here.  During the Depression, Abraham Lincoln meant more to the country than a great president, he was a symbol of hope and the American Dream, and in this period Lincoln statuary reflected the attitudes and needs of the American people.

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