Thursday, March 28, 2024

Atlantans outraged as park in Black community to be named for Confederate hero

Livinston-Mims.jpe
Livingston Mims, served as Atlanta’s mayor from 1901 to 1903, and was a staunch segregationist (Photo Source: Historic Image photographer unknown)

(Atlanta) – A controversy in the city of Atlanta is brewing over the naming of a park in a Black community. Some are shocked that the city plans to name the park after a former mayor and Confederate officer, Major Livingston Mims.

Mims served as Atlanta’s mayor from 1901 to 1903, and was a staunch segregationist. The park development will cost an estimated $40 million and will include a statue of Mims alongside 15 other statues of Black local and national leaders and a Georgia Native American chief. Among these statues will be likenesses of noted civil rights leader Julian Bond and famed educator and leader W.E.B. Dubois. The Atlanta leadership of the NAACP states that “Including the Confederate Mims with these leaders would validate the principle of the ‘lost cause’ that has been promoted for 140 years by the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Sons of the Confederate Veterans, whose members include Georgia legislators, law enforcement officers and other politicians. The ‘lost cause’ postulates that the South lost the war but that the Confederate ’cause’ (enslaving Africans and people of African descent), and decision to wage war against the United States, was just.”

The planned project will use a combination of private donations and public tax dollars to honor a hero of the Confederacy and this does not sit well with some, including the Atlanta branch of the NAACP. According to a press release from the Atlanta NAACP, “There should be no building of any structure, park or green space that honors any person or organization  that represents the celebration of the oppression of any racial, religious or minority group.”

Surprisingly, the naming of the park has the backing of former Atlanta mayor and civil rights icon Ambassador Andrew Young, who reportedly engaged in a heated discussion with Atlanta NAACP President Richard Rose about the park.

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