Confederate monument in Decatur can be moved but not hidden

Behind the former courthouse in Decatur Square sits this Confederate monument. BOB ANDRES /BANDRES@AJC.COM

Credit: Bob Andres

Credit: Bob Andres

Behind the former courthouse in Decatur Square sits this Confederate monument. BOB ANDRES /BANDRES@AJC.COM

A 30-foot Confederate monument in downtown Decatur could be relocated to another visible site or placed in historical context, but it can't be destroyed or concealed, according to a DeKalb County legal opinion released Tuesday.

The DeKalb Board of Commissioners will now consider what to do about the monument after passing a resolution in October condemning the monument for glorifying the Confederacy.

The legal opinion by County Attorney O.V. Brantley concludes that the county government owns the monument and is prohibited by state law from removing it from public view. But the opinion says the monument could be moved to a cemetery, museum or other property.

The monument, an obelisk erected in 1908 outside the old county courthouse, contains an inscription praising soldiers of the Confederacy in part because they “were of a covenant keeping race.”

>>Exclusive to subscribers: Read the full story and DeKalb’s legal memo on myAJC.com.

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