The following is excerpts from a MinnPost
article. You can (and should) read the
entire article here.
Courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society
It’s easy, as Minnesotans, to sit back and watch from a safe
distance as Americans elsewhere struggle to decide what to do about the
Confederate monuments in their midst. Minnesota, after all, is apparently among
the minority of states without at least one such monument within its borders.
But before we congratulate ourselves for our sophisticated and nuanced
understanding of history and race, we would do well to remember what happened
in our state just over a century ago.
On the day after Christmas, 1912, several hundred people
gathered at the corner of what was then Front and Main streets in downtown
Mankato to mark the 50th anniversary of the largest mass hanging in U.S.
history. Thirty-eight Dakota men had been executed at that exact spot for
crimes allegedly committed during the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862. The highlight of
the 50th anniversary commemoration was the dedication of a granite monument
inscribed with the words, “Here Were Hanged 38 Sioux Indians.”
In his dedication address, Judge Lorin Cray rejected any
notion that the monument inappropriately glorified a mass killing. As
the Mankato Free Press reported, he “wished to have it understood
that the monument [had] not been erected to gloat over the deaths of the
redmen,” but was instead meant “simply to record accurately an event in
history.” The judge’s assessment held sway for more than four decades.
But slowly opinions changed.
In the '50s, an effort to remove it
In the late 1950s, a small group of Mankatoites began
advocating for the monument’s removal. Its presence, they argued, gave the city
an “unwholesome reputation.” ….
The monument remained in place for another 15 or so years
while the arguments over its fate ebbed and flowed. In 1971, the city finally
removed it — but only to make way for urban removal. The contentious granite
slab was placed in storage with plans to reinstall it at some point in the
future.
By that time, however, many Mankato residents had come to
believe that commemorating a mass execution was, at the very least, tacky and
culturally insensitive — and possibly even an incitement to violence given the
rise of militant organizations like the American Indian
Movement. The monument
never reappeared in public.
Current location is a mystery
The current location of the Mankato monument remains unknown.
…
Now a new memorial exists near the place where the vanished
monument once stood. Reconciliation Park features a statue of a buffalo and a
large “scroll” inscribed with the names of the 38 men who were executed there.
It’s hard to imagine what it must have felt like for an
American Indian — especially a Dakota — to walk past that granite slab at Front
and Main, knowing that many Minnesotans considered it simply a piece of history,
etched in stone. Thankfully it’s gone now, even if it was meant to be removed
only temporarily. Its disappearance has not erased history. But the fact that
it existed at all should serve as a reminder that we Minnesotans have always
struggled, and often failed, to live up to our ideals of racial and cultural
justice. It’s not just southerners. We northerners are capable of erecting
“eyesores,” too.
Dave Kenney is a freelance writer specializing in
Minnesota history.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.