LIFE / CULTURE
Statue of Lincoln and kneeling black man removed from Boston
Published: Dec 30, 2020 08:53 PM
A statue of Abraham Lincoln next to a kneeling, newly freed slave was removed on Tuesday in Boston by order of the mayor's office, local television news reported.

The Lincoln Park 'Emancipation' statue, a statue that is among monuments drawing scrutiny that depicts former US President Abraham Lincoln standing over a kneeling freed Africans American man, is seen in Washington DC, the US on June 22. Photo: AFP

The contrast of the fully clothed Lincoln and a near-naked black man on his knees was considered demeaning, and the city's arts council ruled in June 2019 in favor of its removal. 

"The decision for removal acknowledges the statue's role in perpetuating harmful prejudices and obscuring the role of black Americans in shaping the nation's fight for freedom," the mayor's office said in a statement.

A petition launched by a local artist had gathered 12,000 signatures to remove the statue, entitled the Emancipation Group.

Put up in 1879 in a square in the state capital of Massachusetts, it was a replica of a statue installed in Washington DC in 1876. 

While it was funded by a group largely made up of former slaves, they did not have the final say on the monument's design, which was meant to honor Lincoln's proclamation of emancipation.

The 16th president of the US, dubbed "Honest Abe" and the "Great Emancipator," banned slavery with the edict in 1863, in the middle of the Civil War that had been triggered by the secession of southern states intent on maintaining slavery.

In the wake of massive race demonstrations in summer 2020 over the killing of a black man by police in Minneapolis, statues of Christopher Colombus, Theodore Roosevelt and the secessionist general Robert E Lee - have been removed or vandalized, including in Boston, New York, and Washington DC.