Confederate Statue On UNC’s Campus Vandalized

Silent Sam, a Confederate statue on the University of North Carolina campus, was vandalized over the weekend. The statue was erected in 1913 as a memorial to the 321 students and alumni who died during the Civil War.

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From ABC 11:

Police are investigating after someone spray-painted the words “murderer” and “black lives matter” on the “Silent Sam” Confederate memorial on the campus of UNC Chapel Hill.

The statue has frequently been a source of controversy and the scene of protests over the years.

“As an African-American woman, who is a student here, that statue is the very statue that pretty much says I don’t belong here, that I shouldn’t be here,” said UNC student, Kirsten Adams. “It is a relevant statue, and so it should be there, on the other hand if we keep Silent Sam up, if we keep all these halls named after these racists, it’s like we’re celebrating the racism so you kind of have to draw a line somewhere.”

“The artist responsible for this thing we like to call vandalism I think what they’ve done is not vandalism, they’ve made a major improvement to the statue,” said UNC student, Nikhil Umesh.

The statue of a Confederate Army soldier was erected on campus in 1913 as a memorial to the more than 300 UNC students who died in the Civil War.

Sculptor John Wilson intended the soldier to be “silent” because there is not a cartridge box on the man’s belt so he cannot fire his gun – hence the “Silent Sam” name.

“To go out and deface that, that’s been here however long it’s been here, that’s crazy,” said James Elder, one of many who stopped by to see what happened to the statue overnight.

“(The statue) represents hate, represents slavery, represents the division between blacks and whites and it’s not, UNC, we’ve gone through a lot of stuff, but that’s in the past, leave it in the past, that’s history,” said Elder.

“I think it’s a cowardly act done by people who skulk around in the dark of night who are not willing to protest visibly,” said Chapel Hill resident James Ward.

UNC officials responded to ABC 11 about the vandalism Sunday:

We understand that the issue of race and place is both emotional and, for many, painful. Carolina is working hard to ensure we have a thoughtful, respectful and inclusive dialogue on the issue. The extensive discussions with the Carolina community this past year by the Board of Trustees and University leadership, and the work we will be doing to contextualize the history of our campus is a big part of advancing those conversations. We welcome all points of view, but damaging or defacing statues is not the way to go about it.

This isn’t the first campus Confederate memorial stirred in controversy. The newly elected student-body President at the University of Texas has been working to remove a Jefferson Davis statue from campus.

While those who take issue with the statue certainly have a right to protest its existence on campus, blatant vandalism is definitely not the right play.

UNC has already taken steps to cover the graffiti.

[via ABC 11]

  1. waltjrsfratcock

    I’m all for the vandalizing of rival schools football fields and such, but touching anything that recognizes important history or symbolizes the values of a university is just fucked up.

    10 years ago at 3:00 pm
  2. Danny Porush

    This type of stuff is getting out of hand, especially to someone born and raised in the south. No, not because I wish dad still owned some slaves or that my college tuition was paid for with slave money, but because it is part of history. No one has owned a slave legally since 1865 so most of us “confederate flag waving racists” are in fact drunk lunatics proud of the south or people that are truly proud of their heritage. Let’s not forget that 1. The Union had slaves as well and 2. Pride in the confederate states/the south is heritage, not hate.

    10 years ago at 3:12 pm
    1. Fratasaurus

      At this point, it has nothing to do with the facts of the matter. Its an assault on the south and greco-roman culture in general.

      10 years ago at 3:24 pm
  3. A Well Known Result

    Having 3 HelmetStickers articles in one day makes me want to protest.

    10 years ago at 3:15 pm
  4. The Password is Taco

    People are taking things like this statue way too personally these days. It’s history, not a political statement. And if you’re too blind to see the difference between the two, then I don’t know how the hell you got into a school like UNC being that retarded.

    10 years ago at 3:27 pm
  5. CheapBeerandChubbies

    Personally, as someone who likes to think that they aren’t racist, this kind of thing inclines me to be more prejudiced. As bad as that sounds, defacing a monument honoring 300+ lost lives is purely unacceptable. If this was a monument commemorating MLK or any civil rights leaders that had similar comments, like “KKK” this would be a national news story

    10 years ago at 3:35 pm
      1. Fuhckwagonwheel

        The amount of down votes this received says a lot about TFM bigot community.

        10 years ago at 9:12 am
  6. DudeBroGuy

    I’m usually against the “celebrating our heritage” argument that people have been presenting about the south, but the statue is intent islet designed so “Sam” can shoot his rifle. This was pointless, uneducated vandalism towards heritage instead of a symbol of racism.

    10 years ago at 3:35 pm