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38°38′40″N 90°16′47″W / 38.644317°N 90.279642°W | |
Location | St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
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The Memorial to the Confederate Dead is a Confederate memorial in Missouri.
Around 1899, the Ladies’ Confederate Monument Association began raising funds to erect a monument in St. Louis to soldiers who had fought against the United States. After some $23,000 ($411,305 today [1]) was raised, mostly from the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the monument was installed in Forest Park, the city's largest park. It was dedicated on December 4, 1914. [2]
It was rededicated in 1964 on its 50th anniversary. [2]
In 2015, St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay launched an effort to have the monument removed. [3] He appointed a committee of business and civic interests, which later that year recommended its removal. [4]
in June 2017, the monument was removed from Forest Park, [5] one of at least 36 Confederate memorials removed that year from locations around the country. [6]
As of 2022, it awaits a new home outside St. Louis City and County limits, per an agreement between the city and Missouri Civil War Museum in Jefferson Barracks. [5]
| |
38°38′40″N 90°16′47″W / 38.644317°N 90.279642°W | |
Location | St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
---|
The Memorial to the Confederate Dead is a Confederate memorial in Missouri.
Around 1899, the Ladies’ Confederate Monument Association began raising funds to erect a monument in St. Louis to soldiers who had fought against the United States. After some $23,000 ($411,305 today [1]) was raised, mostly from the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the monument was installed in Forest Park, the city's largest park. It was dedicated on December 4, 1914. [2]
It was rededicated in 1964 on its 50th anniversary. [2]
In 2015, St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay launched an effort to have the monument removed. [3] He appointed a committee of business and civic interests, which later that year recommended its removal. [4]
in June 2017, the monument was removed from Forest Park, [5] one of at least 36 Confederate memorials removed that year from locations around the country. [6]
As of 2022, it awaits a new home outside St. Louis City and County limits, per an agreement between the city and Missouri Civil War Museum in Jefferson Barracks. [5]