This blog grew out of my "Down Da Road I Go Blog," which was originally to be about stuff I was interested in, music and what I was doing. There was so much history and Civil War entries, I spun two more off. Starting Jan. 1, 2012, I will be spinning a Naval blog off this one called "Running the Blockade."
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Community Organizers Want Confederate Monument Removed From Chicago's Oak Woods Cemetery
From the April 7, 2019, Chicago Sun-Times by Rachel Hinton.
Two black groups want the monument removed because such black notables as Ida B. Wells, Jesse Owens and Chicago's first black mayor, Harold Washington are buried in the cemetery. About a dozen protested. They would like to have a monument to Ida B. Wells. (At one time there was a monument to this remarkable woman in the form of the Ida B. Wells Housing Project.)
The monument stands atop what is called the Confederate Mound at the cemetery and is the site of the graves of over 4,000 Confederate soldiers who died at Camp Douglas prison during the Civil War. It was a Union prison noted for its harsh conditions.
The cemetery is located at 1035 E. 67th Street in Chicago's Greater Grand Crossing neighborhood.
The Confederate Mound monument is administered by the Federal Veterans Administration and overseen by the Abraham Lincoln National cemetery in Elwood, Illinois (near Joliet).
Matthew Evans, the camp commander of the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) Camp Douglas Camp #516, says there is little they can do because the site is owned by the Veterans Administration.
Personally, I would like to have monuments to the three people mentioned in the first paragraph as long as they are privately funded. They were all remarkable people whose memories should never be forgotten.
--Old Secesh
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