99% Invisible - 273- Notes on an Imagined Plaque
Episode Date: August 30, 2017Monuments don’t just appear in the wake of someone’s death — they are erected for reasons specific to a time and place. In 1905, one such memorial was put up in downtown Memphis, Tennessee, to c...ommemorate Nathan Bedford Forrest, who had died in 1877. This week, we feature the story of an imagined plaque that could accompany this statue of Nathan Bedford Forrest. Nate DiMeo originally produced this story for his show The Memory Palace under the title: Notes on an Imagined Plaque to be Added to the Statue of General Nathan Bedford Forrest, Upon Hearing that the Memphis City Council has Voted to Move it and the Exhumed Remains of General Forrest and his Wife, Mary Ann Montgomery Forrest, from their Current Location in a Park Downtown, to the Nearby Elmwood Cemetery. Notes on an Imagined Plaque
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This is 99% invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Armato is always read the plaque. It's always worth stopping to see what
person or event is being commemorated in stone and metal. The person being depicted is not
always worthy. The story being told is not always true. Plaques often tell you more about the person
who commissioned them than the historical figure that they are honoring. It's still worth always reading the plaque, but it's not enough to just read
the plaque. If I'd denominator one person to write all the plaques in the world, my choice
would be Nate Dimeo of the Memory Palace. He produced an episode about a statue and
an imagined plaque in 2015 that just destroys me. It's so good. I've been thinking about it a lot recently,
and I want you to hear it.
Notes on an Imagine plaque to be added to the Statue of General Nathan Bedford Forest
upon hearing that the Memphis City Council is voted to move it,
and the Exume remains of General Forest and his wife, Mary Ann Montgomery Forest,
from their current location in a park downtown to the nearby Elmwood
cemetery. First, it should be big, the plaque. Not necessarily because there's so much to say,
though there is so much to say, but big enough to be noticed on the side of this rather grand
monument, after they move it and the bodies beneath it, across town to the cemetery.
And not just big for the sake of bigness, it needs to stick out as something off, something
that disrupts the admirable balance of the statue, currently so tasteful, wriggle even,
this bronze man on this bronze horse, go tea, square jaw, you get it.
You've seen it before, even if you haven't seen it before.
The statue faces North.
The sculptor wanted for us to face South, to better catch the light, but people complained.
Said it would imply that the general was retreating, and he wasn't a man who retreated.
He surrendered once, but if the sculpture face North, maybe people would forget that part,
I guess.
So ending with the plaque has to be big enough to catch your eye when you're checking
your cell phone or walking your dog or eating a chicken Caesar salad from a plastic box
in a bench. Whatever people are doing there in the cemetery. And whatever they might do
there in the future, because that's why we make these things, right? Placks, bronze
men on bronze horses. We want people in the future to remember.
But first we want them to notice.
So let's think about material for this imagined black.
Maybe the black should be garish,
not intentionally ugly, not necessarily,
but like titanium maybe.
A patch of Frank Geary Futurism on the stage,
stately old thing.
It would catch the light and catch the eye.
In contrast to the northward facing brown green man on his brown green horse, or a great
pigeon, a lit on his brown green epilet.
And I like that the Geary of it all, the Futurism, is not at all futuristic, it's millennial.
A decade from now it'll be dated, literally dated. Bill Bauer, Disney Hall, or wherever will seem so late 90s, so 2000s.
He'll scoff, and I want that.
I want this plaque to be fixed in time, to let people know when it went up, let people
know what was up at the time.
Because that is the point here.
The point of this plaque is to make sure that these future people realize
that this lovely old statue wasn't always old
and wasn't always here in the cemetery.
And moreover, I want the reader
standing there in the shadow cast by the late,
somehow still lamented, Nathan Bedford Forest
on some future summer Sunday,
to know why it wound up in a park
in the other side of town in the first place.
Because memorials aren't memories, they don't just appear upon death, a letter of surrender
signed in some farmhouse at the edge of some battlefield.
It doesn't come complete with a historic marker affixed to the door.
The monument to Nathan Bedford Forest was put in that park downtown for a reason, at a specific moment in time.
And at that time, General Forest and Mrs. Forest were already buried in Elmwood Cemetery.
The same place the city council recently voted to put them. His body and her body were originally dug up from the ground because a group of prominent memphians thought
they were better off somewhere else.
That was 1905, 40 years after the war, 30 years after Forest's death, they felt the city
needed Nathan Bedford Forest right then, because they had seen that city fall from Great Heights.
Memphis had been left relatively unscathed by the war, but not by its outcome.
Not by the end of the slave trade, that had been one of the economic and cultural pillars
of the city. Without the slave market selling men and women and children, without the river
boats and crews and suppliers and dock workers sending them up and down the river, Memphis
was hardly Memphis anymore. And then there was the yellow fever that had swept through the city some years before
and killed so many. And drove many more away, people who never returned after a mandatory
evacuation. And now it was the turn of the next century. And the city was increasingly,
let's just say it, let's just stop not saying things. Increasingly black. And increasingly tense. White businesses
did not like competing with black businesses. Black people did not like being lynched.
This move to move forest started not long after Ida B. Wells, a Memphian too, had started
writing, rabble rousing, boldly, bravely, against lynching. After her friend Thomas Moss
was improperly imprisoned, after a fight between
children over a game of marbles escalated until adults were threatening to burn down his store,
and after Moss wound up being pulled from that prison and strung from a tree, and Wells was
threatened so much so often that she moved away, and the paper she had written for burned to the ground.
away, and the paper she had written for burned to the ground. So wealthy white Memphis, at the beginning of the 1900s, found all of this unpleasant.
So they raised money, $33,000, not to rebuild that newspaper office, or build a police force
that would properly protect all of its citizens, but to make a monument to a man they thought
best represented a Memphis they had lost.
A man who had risen from nothing, a blacksmith's boy, who became a millionaire, and then
believed so strongly in the Confederate cause that he enlisted as a private, then went on
to prove himself perhaps the most brilliant military man, born on American soil, even
if he didn't fight for America.
Those are facts.
That's a true story.
And they like what this story said about the American dream.
Even if it wasn't technically American.
Even if Forrest's million was made by buying and selling human beings, and selling cotton
raised and picked and cleaned and packed by enslaved human beings, even if the cause for
which he employed that military genius was to ensure that men like him could rise up from nothing and make a million dollars,
buying and selling human beings, and stealing their lives in their labor.
In 1905, they held a parade at the unveiling of the new statue and made speeches to honor
the northward facing general. They said nothing of slavery.
They said much about heritage, and honor, and chivalry. They said nothing of how Nathan Bedford
forest had been the first grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. Nothing of the terror it had wrought.
Nothing of the assassinations, or the lynchings. Nothing of how it sought to undermine and overthrow the nation's political order.
The nation that they celebrated there in Memphis in 1905, when they played the star-spangled
banner in Yankee-Doodle-Dandy, right alongside Dixie.
They might not have mentioned any of it, but they knew it.
New about forest in the clan.
They certainly read the clansmen.
It was flying off the shelves that year,
a novel about heroic men hidden beneath bedsheets, out to save white virtue from black barbarians.
It was a historical romance that's how it built itself that looked back long and
lee to a time not long before, when people were still chivalrous, who'd stand up against barbarism,
when people were still chivalrous, who'd stand up against barbarism and miscegenation, and instability, and stand up for order, private property. Who better to represent what they
had lost than Nathan Bedford Forest? They talked about his heroism in battle,
though they didn't talk about the battle of Fort Pillo, when forest ordered the massacre
of hundreds of American troops, attempting to surrender.
Most of them former slaves.
They talked about his faith instead, his strapping build, and about their own hopes, that future
memphians would gaze upon Nathan Bedford Forest, and be inspired.
They even raised some extra cash for a skating rink, so that the white children of Memphis
could play nearby, and the shadow of this great man,
and learn from his shining example, though the bronze wouldn't shine for long,
would brown and green as the symbol of all that was good was exposed to the light of the sun and washed by the rain.
There is debate, there is always debate, about what the clan meant when Forrest was its wizard,
about his intentions at Fort Pillow. They say Forrest repented his sins and his crimes and his deathbed.
Should that be on the plaque? Should it note his regret? I say no. May it have ruined
him. May it have corroded him, like rain on bronze. May it have choked him, like smoke from the crosses,
and homes and churches burnt by men who revered him decades
and decades later, revered him at least in part,
because some influential Memphians decided
they needed to revere him in this way,
in that park, in 1905.
So the plaque should be big,
but it can't be big enough to say all that.
Maybe it should just say, maybe they should all say, the many, many thousands of Confederate
memorials and monuments and markers, that the men who fought and died for the CSA, whatever
their personal reasons, whatever was in their hearts, did so on behalf of a government
formed for the express purpose of
ensuring that men and women and children could be bought and sold and
destroyed it will. Maybe that should be enough. But I want people to know about
those Memphians in 1905 who wanted people to remember for us and why. Who wanted
a symbol to hold up and revere, to stand for what they valued most.
I want people to know that that statue stood in downtown Memphis for 110 years.
And to remember that memorials aren't memories, they have motives, they are historical,
they are not history itself. And I want them to know why it was moved.
That in 2015, after a clement to Pinkney and Shuranda Coleman singleton, and Tywanza
Sanders and Ethel Lance and Suzie Jackson and Cynthia Heard and Myra Thompson and Daniel
Simmons Sr. and to Payne Middleton Doctor were murdered in a church in Charleston, South
Carolina. There were people in Memphis church in Charleston, South Carolina.
There were people in Memphis who were done with symbols, and ready to bury Nathan Bedford
Forest for good.
In 2016, the Tennessee Historical Commission ended up denying the Memphis City Council's
plan to move the Nathan Bedford Forest statue from the park.
It's still there, as of August
2017. The events in Charlottesville, Virginia have resulted in protests at the side of the statue
and renewed calls by the public and city officials to have the monument removed.
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