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Mathews County delays vote to hand Confederate monument over to private group

Photo courtesy of Louise Witherspoon. The Confederate Soldiers and Sailors memorial in Mathews County, Va.
Photo courtesy of Louise Witherspoon. The Confederate Soldiers and Sailors memorial in Mathews County, Va.
Mathews County delays vote to hand Confederate monument over to private group

Updated Dec. 7, 10 a.m.

The Mathews County Board of Supervisors opted not to vote on whether to hand over its Confederate memorial to a private group.

The nearly three-hour public hearing Tuesday night grew heated several times, including an exchange between a man and board chairman Paul Hudgins.

Of the 59 people who spoke, about two thirds were against the plan to deed the Confederate soldiers and sailors memorial and a segment of the county's historic courthouse green to a private group.

The monument and a 21-by-22-foot segment of the county’s historic courthouse green would go to a group run by David "Sonny" Fauver.

Fauver is a member of the local Sons of Confederate Veterans chapter and has previously spoken in favor of protecting the monument, which was erected in 1912.

During that period, a huge wave of monuments were built across the South as a concerted effort by groups to perpetuate the "Lost Cause" ideology, reframing the South's role in and reasons for the Civil War and reinforcing white supremacy after Reconstruction.

Last year, the county put the question on the ballot: should the memorial stay or go?

The referendum showed 80% of Mathews County voters wanted to keep the monument where it stands now.

But that isn't enough for some members of the county's board, including board chair Hudgins.

"I think all of us would've liked to entertain the idea that we can just leave it like it sits. ...That would be all well and good if the monument wasn't under attack," Hudgins said at a meeting in November. "It's obvious you've got groups of people, individuals or associations, that would like to see it taken down." 

The effort comes after places like Richmond and Norfolk have removed their Confederate monuments from public view, often giving them to museums or historical groups.

Charlottesville's Robert E. Lee statue — the focal point for the deadly Unite the Right rally in 2017 — was melted down to make new art.

In Mathews, the draft of the agreement would give the private group ownership of the small plot on the corner of the courthouse green. The group would be responsible for upkeep of the property and monument, and forbidden from buildng anything on the site aside from a metal fence around the memorial.

The draft also says the group could not fly any flags on the property besides the U.S. flag, the Virginia state flag or the Mathews County flag.

Several Mathews residents have expressed concerns about giving away public land and what would happen with the monument and property once the county no longer had control of it.

A public hearing on the handoff is scheduled for Tuesday night.

Ryan is WHRO’s business and growth reporter. He joined the newsroom in 2021 after eight years at local newspapers, the Daily Press and Virginian-Pilot. Ryan is a Chesapeake native and still tries to hold his breath every time he drives through the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel.


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