Detailed plans in place for careful removal of Lee statue
RICHMOND, Va. — When the bronze equestrian statue of Gen. Robert E. Lee arrived by rail in Richmond from Paris in 1890, it took 10,000 men, women and children to haul its pieces more than a mile to the site where the towering monument was erected as a tribute to a Confederate hero.
Now, 130 years later, conservation experts who plan to relocate, yet preserve, the statue face the intricate logistics of disassembling and transporting it to a storage facility. They must also ensure worker safety amid heated public debate over whether the statue is an important piece of Southern heritage or a symbol of white supremacy and racism.
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam announced plans to remove the 13-ton (12-metric ton) sculpture in June, after the death of George Floyd sparked a nationwide protest movement over racial inequality and police brutality. Floyd, a Black man, died in May after a white Minneapolis police officer put his knee on Floyd’s neck for several minutes.
The plan to remove the monument — an imposing, 21-foot (6.4-meter) tall bronze likeness of Lee on a horse that sits atop a granite pedestal nearly twice that high — has been halted at least temporarily by a lawsuit. But Northam has vowed to quickly take down the state-owned statue if and when a judge lifts an injunction barring its removal.