From the November 3, 2021, Daily Press (Virginia) "Virginia counties vote overwhelmingly to keep Confederate monuments" by Dave Ress.
The Matthews County monument was erected in 1912, after a six-year fund-raising effort by the Lane-Diggs Camp of the United Confederate Veterans, the Matthews Monument Association and the United Daughters of the Confederacy.
There is also a state marker near the statue for Captain Sally L. Thompkins, CSA 1833-1916. It reads:
"Sally Thompkins, born at Poplar Grove, 3 miles south of here, was the only woman granted a commission in the Army of the Confederacy. 'Captain Sally' founded and directed Robertson Hospital in Richmond, where over 1300 Confederate soldiers were cared for between 1861 and 1865.
"Her grave and monument are located in Christ Church Cemetery on Williams Wharf Road two miles to the south."
Middlesex erected its United Daughters of the Confederacy monument in 1910. The inscription on it reads: "To commemorate the valor and patriotism of the men, and the devotion and sacrifice of the women of Middlesex in defense of their liberties and their homes."
--Old Secesh
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