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Most Small-Town Texans Want Confederate Symbols To Stay, News Editors Say

Confederate monument on the grounds of the Gregg County Courthouse in Longview, Texas.
Matthew Prosser/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Confederate monument on the grounds of the Gregg County Courthouse in Longview, Texas.

In the wake of the violence in Charlottesville, Va., Confederate monuments are coming down in public places across the country. Overnight, from the campus鈥 South Mall. But they're not going down everywhere.

 

Newspaper editors and reporters whose readership extends far outside the liberal bubble of Austin describe how the debate over Confederate monuments is playing out in their communities. , executive editor of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram

On surveying Confederate veterans monuments in the Fort Worth area:

鈥淲e sent a reporter out to all sorts of small towns and communities outside of Forth Worth proper to try to determine what was going on there. 鈥hat we found was a significant difference of attitudes with regards to monuments that are on display.鈥

A Comanche, Texas local weighs in on the debate over Confederate monuments:

鈥淩ay Williams, he鈥檚 got a boot shop鈥e said, 鈥業鈥檓 from the South and I鈥檓 proud to be from the South,鈥 he said. 鈥楾he big cities, they鈥檙e trying to make it about something else.鈥欌

On the idea that the monuments are about heritage:

鈥淭he sentiment that we heard was that, This is our history and we鈥檙e not racist. We don鈥檛 hate people of color, and these monuments are to the citizens of the community here who serve[d] in the war.鈥

On the difference between rural and urban attitudes:

鈥淚n Forth Worth, there is a movement afoot to change the name of Jefferson Davis Park. In the communities that we visited鈥here were no organized movements to take down any of the memorials.鈥

, editor of the Tyler Morning Telegraph

On the social media campaign to change the name of a local high school:

鈥淩obert E. Lee High School, it has been named that since 1958 when it opened and there was a group that within the past week or so has started asking for the name to be changed. 鈥 believe there鈥檚 more than 9,000 signatures in support of keeping the name.鈥

, reporter with the Longview News-Journal

On locals not really grasping the impact of Confederate monuments on black Americans:

鈥淚 gather that members of the black community here have, for a long time, felt as though they have not necessarily had as strong a voice鈥ecause of that, I don鈥檛 know if those who are in the majority here really grasp鈥ow big of an issue it is for a lot of the residents.鈥

On experiencing racism in Longview firsthand:

鈥淚 as a black man can鈥檛 make another person truly understand what it was like the first time I went into Dillard鈥檚 and noticed that I was not being followed by security.鈥

On being able to look past Confederate symbols:

鈥淚 do not see them coming down anytime soon鈥t doesn鈥檛 bother me but I come from a place where I experienced prejudice as a young, homosexual man versus the racial issues first鈥hat has helped me in my perspective.鈥

, editor of the Victoria Advocate

On keeping the 1912 Confederate Soldiers鈥 statue in Victoria鈥檚 town square:

鈥淭he chairman of the black chamber said he felt the statue or any kind of Confederate symbols should be removed, but the president of the local Daughters of the Confederacy said it鈥檚 a sign of history not of hatred. And we did an informal, unscientific poll and by and large, very overwhelmingly, people said they thought the statue should stay.鈥

Written by Caroline Covington.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .

Rhonda is the newest member of the KUT News team, joining in late 2013 as producer for KUT's new daily news program, The Texas Standard. Rhonda will forever be known as the answer to the trivia question, 鈥淲ho was the first full-time hire for The Texas Standard?鈥 She鈥檚 an Iowa native who got her start in public radio at WFSU in Tallahassee, while getting her Master's Degree in Library Science at Florida State University. Prior to joining KUT and The Texas Standard, Rhonda was a producer for Wisconsin Public Radio.