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Monuments to the lost cause


Monuments to the Lost Cause - Women & the American Story

Background. A monument to Confederate President Jefferson Davis was unveiled in Richmond, Virginia—once the Confederacy's capital city—in June 1907. Along with ...

Memorialization of Robert E. Lee and the Lost Cause - Arlington ...

Detail from a memorial print published in 1895. Images like this made Robert E. Lee the central hero of the Lost Cause memory of the Civil War.

Lost Cause of the Confederacy - Wikipedia

History · A St. · Henry Mosler completed his best known painting, The Lost Cause, three years after the end of the Civil War. · In 1915, members of the United ...

Monument Avenue and the Lost Cause - Smarthistory

Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia, is the original site of six bronze sculptures honoring famous individuals from American history. Five of the sculptures ...

Monuments to the Lost Cause | University of Tennessee Press

Cox, examines Confederate memorials from Monument Avenue to Stone Mountain and explores how each monument, with its associated public rituals, ...

The Lost Cause | Virginia Museum of History & Culture

The exhibition, displayed in the historic Battle Abbey, includes the Memorial Military Murals by Charles Hoffbauer, Robert E. Lee statue by ...

The Lost Cause and Confederate memory - Smarthistory

[1] Monument Avenue was slowly depopulated of its bronze and marble Confederates; by the end of Summer 2021 the Lee statue was alone. In September 2021, it too ...

How the Lost Cause Myth Led to Confederate “Monument Fever”

The Lost Cause emphasized the stories of noble, chivalrous warriors — the type of people who belong on a pedestal. It presented the antebellum ...

Confederate Memorial - Arlington National Cemetery

The elaborately designed monument offers a nostalgic, mythologized vision of the Confederacy, including highly sanitized depictions of slavery. Standing on a 32 ...

Richmond's Monument Avenue: Memorializing the Lost Cause Myth

Richmond's Confederate monuments on Monument Avenue supported the Lost Cause myth and dominated the city's monumental landscape more than 130 years.

Monuments to the Lost Cause: Women, Art, and the Landscapes of ...

This richly illustrated collection of fourteen essays examines the ways in which Confederate memorials - from Monument Avenue to Stone Mountain - and the ...

Monument Avenue and the Lost Cause (video) - Khan Academy

More videos on YouTube ... Richmond's Monument Avenue, once adorned with Confederate statues, stands empty, marking a shift in public sentiment. The removal of ...

Whose Heritage? Public Symbols of the Confederacy

... Lost Cause” and the revisionist history that these monuments represent. White supremacists have also taken up the cause, staging hundreds of ...

women, art, and the landscapes of southern memory

Monuments to the lost cause : women, art, and the landscapes of southern memory -book.

Historical Introduction: Confederate Monuments | Atlanta History ...

The strategic placement of monuments at public sites was meant as an official and permanent affirmation of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. Lost Cause ...

Of statues and stories: Reckoning with the Lost Cause

And at the base of the monument, this inscription, “To Our Dead Heroes by the Daughters of the Confederacy,” and a Latin quotation, Victrix ...

Cornerstone Contributions: Black Richmonders, the Lee Monument ...

This event coincided with the beginnings of the Lost Cause ideology as conceptualized in Edward Pollard's The Lost Cause: A New Southern History ...

Juxtapositioned Memory: Lost Cause Statues and Sites of Lynching

The monuments also enable the erroneous notion directly inherited from the Lost Cause, common to this day, that 'the lack of an ability to ...

The Lost Cause - Encyclopedia Virginia

Two competing men's organizations formed to eulogize Lee: the Lee Memorial Association of Lexington and the Lee Monument Association, initiated by Early and ...

Monument Avenue and the Lost Cause - YouTube

A conversation on Monument Avenue, Richmond, Virginia, July, 2021 speakers: Dr. Sarah Beetham and Dr. Steven Zucker.