TRUMP WILL SUPPRESS AMERICAN HISTORY
The Atlantic|January - February 2024
This past fall, in a small southern foundry, Robert E. Lee's face was placed on a furnace that reached a temperature of more than 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. As the heat mounted, a haunting orange-red glow appeared across Lee's severed visage, and the cracks that split his bronze cheeks began to look like streams of dark tears beneath his eyes.
Clint Smith
TRUMP WILL SUPPRESS AMERICAN HISTORY

Lee's face was once part of a larger statue of the Confederate general that stood in Charlottesville, Virginia, and was at the center of protests and counterprotests during the infamous "Unite the Right" rally there in 2017. The city had taken the statue down in 2021 and given it to a local Black-history museum. Once melted, the statue's bronze would be repurposed into a new work of public art.

As I contemplated Lee's metal face glowing like a small sun in the dark universe of the workshop, I thought of the statement issued by former President Donald Trump when the statue had come down. "Robert E. Lee is considered by many Generals to be the greatest strategist of them all," Trump had written, reaffirming his past praise for the Confederate leader. Trump was implicitly telling his base: They came for Lee, and next they will come for you. It's not hard to see why the metalworkers who melted down the statue of Lee did so at an undisclosed location; they reportedly feared for their safety.

This story is from the January - February 2024 edition of The Atlantic.

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This story is from the January - February 2024 edition of The Atlantic.

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