Confederate Monument (Oxford, Mississippi)
The Confederate Monument in Oxford, Mississippi is installed on the University of Mississippi campus. It was designed by John Stinson and installed in 1906 at the campus administrative entrance. A reinterpretation plaque was added beneath the monument in 2016, but it was revised a few months later in response to protests. Subsequent protests concerning its prominent location led to it being relocated to a secluded Civil War cemetery in 2020. The monument memorializes Company A of the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, the University Greys, occasionally referred to as University Grays. At the outset of the American Civil War, most of the student body enlisted in the Confederate Army and formed Company A of the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, which fought in several battles and were all but wiped out at the Battle of Gettysburg. HistoryUniversity Grey's American Civil War serviceAt the beginning of the American Civil War, most of the student body of the University of Mississippi rallied to the Confederate cause, many of them forming Company A of the 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment, known as the University Greys.[1] Company A fought at the Battle of First Manassas in the brigade of Brigadier General Barnard Elliott Bee, a unit of the Army of the Shenandoah (Confederate) under the command of then Brigadier General Joseph E. Johnston.[2] The 11th Mississippi Infantry Regiment fought at the Battle of Gaines's Mill, the Battle of Malvern Hill, the Battle of Second Manassas, the Battle of South Mountain and the Battle of Antietam.[3] As a unit of the division under the command of Brigadier General J. Johnston Pettigrew in Pickett's Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg, the University Greys suffered 100 per cent loss with every soldier in the company who started the charge having been killed, wounded or captured.[4][5] Statue controversyThe Confederate Monument was designed by John Stinson and installed in 1906 by the Daughters of the Confederacy at the campus administrative entrance.[6] The statue was a focal point for unrest in 1962 when James Meredith attempted to enroll in the university, which hitherto had been segregated and open to white people only. The ensuing Ole Miss riot of 1962 saw the police using tear gas and two murders.[7] Since then, the university has been racially integrated, and by 2016 some 13.1 percent of the student body was Black.[7] (Black people account for 38.69 percent of the population of Mississippi.[8]) In 1997, the university banned sticks in the football stadium, so spectators could not wave Confederate battle flags, the Colonel Reb mascot was retired in 2003, and the university marching band no longer plays "Dixie".[9] In 2012, when the university celebrated the 50th anniversary of desegregation, Black and white students clashed on election night when Barack Obama secured a second term. In 2014, two students tied a noose and a Confederate flag to the campus statue of James Meredith. They were later convicted of Federal hate crimes.[7] In 2015, the university stopped flying the Confederate-themed flag of Mississippi.[9] That year, in response to pressure from students about the Confederate Monument, the university decided to add a plaque providing context to the monument. A committee was appointed in 2015, which drew up a wording. A plaque was fabricated and installed in March 2016.[6][10] The plaque read:[6]
Criticism of the wording of the plaque resulted in the chancellor, Jeffrey Scott Vitter, appointing a Advisory Committee on History and Context, consisting of four academics, Donald Cole, Andrew Mullins, Charles Ross and David Sansing, to consider a revised wording.[11][10] The committee's terms of reference did not permit it to consider relocating the statue.[6] The replacement plaque was approved by the chancellor, and installed in June 2016. It read:[10]
In 2018, a student campaign began to have the statue relocated to a less conspicuous location, a Confederate cemetery on a remote part of campus. A 2004 Mississippi law forbid the removal or rededication of monuments to the "War Between the States" that were erected on public property, but it permitting relocation to a more suitable location if the governing body of the site determined that the new location was a more appropriate site and still on public property. In this case, the Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning claimed jurisdiction.[6] In March 2019, the Associated Student Body Senate unanimously passed a motion calling for the statue's relocation.[12] The university board voted to move the statue in June 2020, and it was moved to the new location in July. The relocation was estimated to cost $1.2 million, which was raised from private subscriptions.[9][13] DesignThe sculpture was in marble on a brick foundation. It depicted a Confederate soldier with a rifle in his right hand and saluting with his left.[14] The inscription on east face of sculpture read:[14]
The inscription on the south face read:[14]
The inscription on west face of sculpture read:[14]
See alsoReferences
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