The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Lee’s statue is gone. What it unleashed remains.

That statue in Charlottesville emboldened racists, prompted public displays of violence and led to private threats – and those don’t melt down as easily as bronze

Perspective by
Metro columnist
October 28, 2023 at 12:00 p.m. EDT
Workers place the metal face of Robert E. Lee on top of a furnace to preheat it. (Hadley Green/The Washington Post)
6 min

That it had to be done in secret says it all.

The Robert E. Lee statue that propelled white nationalists to wield torches and march through Charlottesville couldn’t be destroyed in a known place at a known time. Of course not.

The foundry that agreed to melt down that oxidized metal — after others refused — couldn’t be publicly revealed. Of course not.