Emancipation and Freedom Monument.Photo: Shaban Athuman/Richmond Times-Dispatch via APThe city of Richmond, Virginia has a new monument.The Emancipation and Freedom Monument was unveiled on Wednesday about two miles away from where thestatue of Robert E. Leeonce sat, before it was removed earlier this month.The monument, which has been in the works since 2013, includes two 12-foot bronze statues of a man and a woman holding an infant after being newly freed from slavery, according to awebsitefor the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Commission, the agency behind the artwork.A group of 10 Black Virginians are also honored for their contributions to the “centuries-long fight for emancipation and freedom” in a plaque on the case of the monument. Out of nearly 100 nominations, five individuals who fought against slavery were chosen, as well as five who fought for equality from 1865 to 1970.Among the Virginians featured are Dred Scott, William Harvey Carney — a former enslaved person who became the first Black recipient of the Medal of Honor — as well as John Mercer Langston, Virginia’s first Black member of Congress.Shaban Athuman/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP"Today, I attended the powerful unveiling of the Emancipation and Freedom Statue in Richmond. The monument is an important step in telling a more inclusive story of Virginia’s history," Gov. Ralph Northamwroteon social media Wednesday.“The Emancipation and Freedom monument captures the emotion of the end of slavery. It honors the resilience of Black Virginians who resisted, rebelled, and self-liberated,“addedState Sen. Jennifer McClellan. “Emancipation was not a moment, it was a movement. We carry on the work for equality and freedom today.“In September, Virginia’s Supreme Court ruledunanimouslythat the graffiti-covered Lee statue could be removed from its spot in the state’s capital.Gov. Northam first announced plans to remove the statue in June 2020 after protests following the death ofGeorge Floydsparked around the country, per theAssociated Press.Want to get the biggest stories fromPEOPLEevery weekday?Subscribe to our new podcast,PEOPLE Every Day,to get the essential celebrity, entertainment and human interest news stories Monday through Friday.In response to the Supreme Court ruling, Northam issued a statement saying that the removal of the statue would allow for “a more inclusive future — where the Commonwealth glorifies the Confederacy no longer.“Officials also plan toinstall a time capsulein a cornerstone of the pedestal where the statue once stood, which will include dozens of artifacts representing the changes Virginia has gone through since 2020 — including an expired vial of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine and a Black Lives Matter sticker.“This monument…reflected Virginia in 1890 — and it’s time to remove both, so that our public spaces better reflect who we are as a people in 2021,” Gov. Northamsaid in a statementat the time, noting that it was “fitting” to include a new time capsule that tells the story of what “led to the removal of these monuments to a lost cause.”
Emancipation and Freedom Monument.Photo: Shaban Athuman/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP

The city of Richmond, Virginia has a new monument.The Emancipation and Freedom Monument was unveiled on Wednesday about two miles away from where thestatue of Robert E. Leeonce sat, before it was removed earlier this month.The monument, which has been in the works since 2013, includes two 12-foot bronze statues of a man and a woman holding an infant after being newly freed from slavery, according to awebsitefor the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Commission, the agency behind the artwork.A group of 10 Black Virginians are also honored for their contributions to the “centuries-long fight for emancipation and freedom” in a plaque on the case of the monument. Out of nearly 100 nominations, five individuals who fought against slavery were chosen, as well as five who fought for equality from 1865 to 1970.Among the Virginians featured are Dred Scott, William Harvey Carney — a former enslaved person who became the first Black recipient of the Medal of Honor — as well as John Mercer Langston, Virginia’s first Black member of Congress.Shaban Athuman/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP"Today, I attended the powerful unveiling of the Emancipation and Freedom Statue in Richmond. The monument is an important step in telling a more inclusive story of Virginia’s history,” Gov. Ralph Northamwroteon social media Wednesday.“The Emancipation and Freedom monument captures the emotion of the end of slavery. It honors the resilience of Black Virginians who resisted, rebelled, and self-liberated,“addedState Sen. Jennifer McClellan. “Emancipation was not a moment, it was a movement. We carry on the work for equality and freedom today.“In September, Virginia’s Supreme Court ruledunanimouslythat the graffiti-covered Lee statue could be removed from its spot in the state’s capital.Gov. Northam first announced plans to remove the statue in June 2020 after protests following the death ofGeorge Floydsparked around the country, per theAssociated Press.Want to get the biggest stories fromPEOPLEevery weekday?Subscribe to our new podcast,PEOPLE Every Day,to get the essential celebrity, entertainment and human interest news stories Monday through Friday.In response to the Supreme Court ruling, Northam issued a statement saying that the removal of the statue would allow for “a more inclusive future — where the Commonwealth glorifies the Confederacy no longer.“Officials also plan toinstall a time capsulein a cornerstone of the pedestal where the statue once stood, which will include dozens of artifacts representing the changes Virginia has gone through since 2020 — including an expired vial of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine and a Black Lives Matter sticker.“This monument…reflected Virginia in 1890 — and it’s time to remove both, so that our public spaces better reflect who we are as a people in 2021,” Gov. Northamsaid in a statementat the time, noting that it was “fitting” to include a new time capsule that tells the story of what “led to the removal of these monuments to a lost cause.”
The city of Richmond, Virginia has a new monument.
The Emancipation and Freedom Monument was unveiled on Wednesday about two miles away from where thestatue of Robert E. Leeonce sat, before it was removed earlier this month.
The monument, which has been in the works since 2013, includes two 12-foot bronze statues of a man and a woman holding an infant after being newly freed from slavery, according to awebsitefor the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Commission, the agency behind the artwork.
A group of 10 Black Virginians are also honored for their contributions to the “centuries-long fight for emancipation and freedom” in a plaque on the case of the monument. Out of nearly 100 nominations, five individuals who fought against slavery were chosen, as well as five who fought for equality from 1865 to 1970.
Among the Virginians featured are Dred Scott, William Harvey Carney — a former enslaved person who became the first Black recipient of the Medal of Honor — as well as John Mercer Langston, Virginia’s first Black member of Congress.
Shaban Athuman/Richmond Times-Dispatch via AP

“Today, I attended the powerful unveiling of the Emancipation and Freedom Statue in Richmond. The monument is an important step in telling a more inclusive story of Virginia’s history,” Gov. Ralph Northamwroteon social media Wednesday.
“The Emancipation and Freedom monument captures the emotion of the end of slavery. It honors the resilience of Black Virginians who resisted, rebelled, and self-liberated,“addedState Sen. Jennifer McClellan. “Emancipation was not a moment, it was a movement. We carry on the work for equality and freedom today.”
In September, Virginia’s Supreme Court ruledunanimouslythat the graffiti-covered Lee statue could be removed from its spot in the state’s capital.
Gov. Northam first announced plans to remove the statue in June 2020 after protests following the death ofGeorge Floydsparked around the country, per theAssociated Press.
Want to get the biggest stories fromPEOPLEevery weekday?Subscribe to our new podcast,PEOPLE Every Day,to get the essential celebrity, entertainment and human interest news stories Monday through Friday.
In response to the Supreme Court ruling, Northam issued a statement saying that the removal of the statue would allow for “a more inclusive future — where the Commonwealth glorifies the Confederacy no longer.”
Officials also plan toinstall a time capsulein a cornerstone of the pedestal where the statue once stood, which will include dozens of artifacts representing the changes Virginia has gone through since 2020 — including an expired vial of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine and a Black Lives Matter sticker.
“This monument…reflected Virginia in 1890 — and it’s time to remove both, so that our public spaces better reflect who we are as a people in 2021,” Gov. Northamsaid in a statementat the time, noting that it was “fitting” to include a new time capsule that tells the story of what “led to the removal of these monuments to a lost cause.”
source: people.com