University of North Carolina removes Confederate pedestal from campus overnight

CHAPEL HILL, NC - Demonstrators rally for the removal of a Confederate statue coined Silent Sam on the campus of the University of Chapel Hill on August 22, 2017 in Chapel Hill North Carolina. (Photo by Sara D. Davis/Getty Images)

The last remnants of a Confederate statue were removed from North Carolina’s flagship public university early Tuesday at the request of UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt, who also announced her resignation in a move that increases pressure on the system’s board of governors to give up on plans to restore the monument.

The university announced at 1 a.m. that the removal had begun, only hours after Folt’s surprise order to remove the empty base for the toppled statue known as “Silent Sam.” By 2:40 it was all over. A work crew with a large truck, a forklift and floodlights took the last piece of the base from the main quad, leading to cheers by a crowd that had gathered to watch.

READ MORE: Watch First on-screen kiss between Black people gets remixed with ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ score

The statue itself has been in storage since it was pulled down last August by protesters who consider it a racist symbol. Citing safety concerns, Folt said the massive pedestal and bronze memorial plaques also will be stored while their fate is decided.

“The presence of the remaining parts of the monument on campus poses a continuing threat both to the personal safety and well-being of our community and to our ability to provide a stable, productive educational environment,” she wrote. As for her resignation, she said she would step down at the end of the school year.

In a statement sent after midnight, Gov. Roy Cooper said he appreciates Folt’s “actions to keep students and the public safe.”

READ MORE: Black grad student arrested AGAIN after protesting UNC’s plan to relocate Confederate statute on campus

“North Carolina is welcoming to all, and our public university should reflect that,” Cooper said.

But Folt’s move drew an angry response from Harry Smith, chairman of the Board of Governors that oversees the state’s public universities. The board had given itself until mid-March to come up with a plan for the statue, and Smith said that timeline hasn’t changed.

“We are incredibly disappointed at this intentional action,” he said in a statement before the removal work began. “It lacks transparency and it undermines and insults the Board’s goal to operate with class and dignity.”

As the public face of the university, Folt had been criticized both by those who wanted the statue gone for good, and those who said state law required it to be restored to where it had stood in McCorkle Place since 1913.

The announcement of her departure comes weeks after the rejection of a plan, which Folt helped craft, to build a new $5 million history center on campus to house Silent Sam. Folt’s announcement also comes shortly after the departure of the president of the statewide university system, Margaret Spellings, who had also frequently drawn protesters’ barbs.

READ MORE: Activists tear down controversial Confederate statue on UNC campus

The Board of Governors rejected that plan in December and announced it would go “back to the drawing board.” Folt acknowledged in December that the plan to build the history center “didn’t satisfy anyone.”

Folt, who came to UNC in 2013 from Dartmouth College, said Monday she was proud of work she’d overseen on the Campaign for Carolina fundraising drive that raised more than $2 billion as of last summer, or about half of its ambitious goal. But Folt’s tenure also saw UNC sued by a transgender employee over the state’s so-called bathroom bill, as well as the Silent Sam debate growing more heated after a deadly white nationalist rally in Virginia in 2017.

“Silent Sam” was toppled in August by protesters who decried its origins, including a racist speech by a former Confederate when it was dedicated.

In early December, Folt and the Chapel Hill campus trustees proposed a site for the new history center about a mile from where the statue previously stood, saying they had to balance safety concerns with a strict 2015 state historical law on Confederate monuments. At the time, Folt and several trustees said they would prefer moving the statue off campus entirely, but were restricted by the monuments law that allows relocation only in narrow circumstances.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans issued a statement early Tuesday saying that Folt “has effectively erased the contribution and sacrifice of these brave veterans and the tribute paid to them by subsequent generations.” Late Monday, before the removal began, the group’s North Carolina spokesman Frank Powell said the group could use the 2015 law to sue if the removal went forward.

___
Associated Press writers Gary D. Robertson in Raleigh, Allen G. Breed in Wake Forest and Tom Foreman Jr. in Winston-Salem contributed to this report.
___
Follow Drew at www.twitter.com/JonathanLDrew

SHARE THIS ARTICLE