MAYOR DELOACH and City Council are to be commended for taking quick, proactive, and reasonable action last week to address the twin issues of the Confederate monument in Forsyth Park and the potential renaming of the Talmadge Bridge.
On the issue of the former, they plan a course of expanding the narrative of the monument to tell a more inclusive story of Savannahians affected by the Civil War and by slavery and segregation.
On the issue of the latter, they will again petition the state to allow a name change for the bridge currently named for segregationist governor Eugene Talmadge.
We will thank City leaders one day for their measured approach. But as we’ve seen, no good deed goes unpunished.
Their middle way is likely to enrage partisans on both ends of the spectrum.
Those who insist that the monument must be left completely alone will likely be outraged. Those who insist that the monument needs to completely come down tomorrow will also likely be very upset.
We are told that both issues are bound up in superseding state law preempting the City’s ability to do very much at all.
But the bottom line is that the people of any community inevitably have the power to put up, alter, or remove whatever monuments they want.
Taxpayer-funded monuments in public spaces are not religious totems. They are intended to reflect and reinforce the commonly held, consensus core values of the city or area in which they reside.
And the commonly held, consensus core values of Savannah, Ga., in the year 2017 simply do not include glorifying or romanticizing the Confederacy in any way.
That’s really all you have to say. That sums up the whole argument.
The state of Georgia will, in the end, not be able to stop Savannah from altering or removing our monuments if we ourselves are determined enough to do so.
If we were to remove our Confederate monuments completely, it is unlikely to be anywhere near as controversial or impactful as some think.
I doubt anyone will miss them, even people inclined to leave them where they are.
The truth is Savannah doesn’t even really have that many in the first place.
We are lucky in that much of Savannah’s core identity and character is as a rather cosmopolitan colonial port city, unlike Richmond, Va., for example, which was the actual capital of the Confederacy and will always be remembered as such.
The monuments in Savannah which one can link specifically to positive portrayals of the Confederacy are few in number:
• The monument to Confederate war dead in Forsyth Park;
• The busts of Francis Bartow and Lafayette McLaws adjacent to the monument;
• The memorial to the “Immortal 600” Confederate POWs outside of Ft. Pulaski (a National Park Service site);
• Several streets on the Southside named for Confederate military figures: Johnston, McLaws, Early, Lee, Stuart, Mosby, Wheeler, Jackson, Hampton, Beauregard, Hood.
That’s about it as far as open, official admiration of specific Confederate, Civil War-era history goes, literally written in stone, and not actually a gravesite.
My usual approach to history is the more history we teach, the better. But the historical value of most of these monuments is questionable. Even as works of art they are average at best.
(My favorite bit of statuary in Forsyth Park, the one on the south end just across from Brighter Day nicknamed “The Hiker,” is actually a wonderful and quite interesting Spanish-American War memorial, one of dozens like it all over the country. I suspect The Hiker will end up on a few lists of statues to take down anyway.)
Anyone who thinks local tourism will be adversely affected by losing a few items of statuary hasn’t been keeping up with developments in the tourism market.
What tourists want is more and better restaurants; more cultural events; more food and drink events; more and better package tours; more value and amenities in hotels; more things to do with kids.
If anything, tourists will be more likely to want to come to Savannah if we can handle this issue with aplomb, confidence, and competence.
If tourists are interested in history, it will mostly be our colonial and antebellum architecture and house museums.
Because battlefields are valuable primary source material for scholars and historians, actual Civil War buffs are more inclined to visit military sites, such as the National Park Service-run Ft. Pulaski and the state-run Ft. McAllister.
(While Ft. Pulaski was ironically engineered largely by a young Robert E. Lee, it began life as a U.S. Army facility and represents a Union victory. Confederates only occupied it for a little over a year. )
The catch in this debate is in defining what “Confederate” is construed to mean.
For many it will mean anything that puts in a positive light the literal four years Georgia was a part of the Confederate States of America.
Others, unsatisfied with addressing only the monument, will extend this to other local place names. Calhoun Square, for example, though not Civil War-era per se, is named for John C. Calhoun, a forceful advocate of slavery.
Others might understandably include on the list any remnants of the Jim Crow era, such as the namesake of the previously mentioned Talmadge Bridge.
For others the targets might include anyone and anything which has ever profited from slavery itself. That would include many of the house museums and antebellum homes mentioned above, which do indeed drive much of our economy.
Such a list would include — not to put too fine a point on it — nearly the entire Savannah Historic Landmark District, Airbnbs and all.
While City Council is already doing an effective job of turning much of the Historic District into a forest of new hotels, I humbly submit the modest proposal that we probably should draw the line at leveling all of downtown Savannah because of its antebellum past.
(I joked a few days ago that the quickest way to take the Confederate Monument down is to tell City Council they can put up a ten-story hotel in the middle of Forsyth Park. I regretted it later when I realized the idea maybe isn’t so far-fetched.)
The real obstacle to altering or removing Savannah’s Confederate monuments probably won’t be the Daughters of the Confederacy, nor the state legislature, nor pasty-faced, doughy neo-Nazis marching with tiki torches from Home Depot.
The obstacle will probably be… other people in favor of altering or removing the monuments.
In today’s highly polarized and politically charged environment, you risk being labeled a racist or Nazi sympathizer if you support taking the monuments down, but simply urge a measured and rational approach in doing so.
Such as the approach being taken by the City of Savannah at this time.
In the end, whether the monuments are removed, destroyed, added to, or left alone, Savannah will still be burdened with a 26 percent poverty rate, about 50 murders a year, skyrocketing juvenile crime, and horrendous schools largely responsible for a grossly undereducated workforce, many of whom probably can’t tell you what century the Civil War happened in.
Some of those issues are indeed directly related to the institutional racism represented by the monuments themselves.
But after those bearded busts are gone, it’ll just be us.
And the real hard work will still be there, waiting to be done.
This article appears in Aug 23-29, 2017.

No one who urges a measured and rational approach to the issue of Confederate monuments is being labeled a “Nazi sympathizer.” That bit of hyperbole might be a bit unfair.
For most reasonably-intelligent people, the term “Nazi sympathizer” is reserved for the turds who marched around Charlottesville yelling racist chants (or any of their brethren who feel the same way but couldn’t make the trip to Charlottesville because their mother needed the car that day) and any politicians who baselessly claim that there were some “very fine people” amongst the hateful, torch-wielding idiots.
Our real problem is stupidity. Our public education in Savannah and other southern areas is deplorable. Schools were better under segregation even for blacks. Integration has driven white students away from public education and has allowed public schools to wallow in mediocrity. Unless we do better to educate our young people in civics, American history, and in life skills we shall remain the laughing stock of the rest of the country: rednecks, White Trash, blacks no better off than they were on the plantations, etc. And a second factor is the stength of ignorant evangelical and pentecostal religion which perpetuates fairy-tale faith and total ignorance of science and reality.
The South has not recovered from the Civil War and it is not the faults of the Yankees; we have met the enemy and it is us.
You’ve overlooked the Gordon monument in Wright Square. Not only was William Washington Gordon a Confederate officer, his monument desecrates the final resting place of Chief Tomochichi– a double whammy. So if Savannah starts altering or destroying monuments, the Gordon will– at the very least– have to be moved to another location and the Tomochichi mound restored, complete with the urn from King George that was stolen.
Civics and American history more suitable for Jeopardy. No conversation around the water fountain or the break room ever centers around those topics. Now life skills, one can definitely do something with those.
Civics and American history ARE life skills, Mr. Cohen. How can people vote if they do not understand our institutions and our history? Either we need to teach them something about our history and government or we need to deny them the right to vote. I’ll take either way.
If y’all knew some history you would know the meaning of NAZI. It of course has nothing to do with statues and monuments, keeping them or taking them down. It also has nothing to do with marching peacefully but a lot to do with violent behavior. Fascism and Nazism were a fearful reaction to social change — often to socialism and communism — on the part of people with little political knowledge who have been sold a bill of goods by various selfish elites. Our Fascists know little but what some of our wealthy elites tell them: we will get you jobs if you attack all these leftists! But actually no jobs will come. We will make you better off by making America great again, but America is already both great and troubled and they will only increase the trouble. Our Oval Office occupant — a squatter if ever there was one — is one of the elites doing this; he is encouraging behavior and attitudes which are essentially Fascist — like the pardon of Sheriff Joe Arpaio.
When your fears and basic instincts of competition and violence are being called upon you can know that those doing so are essentially Fascists.
Integration did not drive white students away from public education, that myth can be put to rest right now along with the one about having a white student sit beside a black student in the classroom will enhance the education of the black student. Now on to the vote, when these candidates run, it’s about them and their platform. Civics and American history are never mentioned. All go overboard including the businesses with the “red, white and blue” bunting.