Rescuing Old Joe

Whoever weds himself to the spirit of this age will find himself a widower in the next.    —   William Inge

Few realize that Florida was so committed to The War Between the States that she gave more soldiers to repel Northern invaders than she had registered voters. Gainesville was among the towns that responded. As a result, the local United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) chapter erected a statue of an ordinary infantryman in honor of the hometown boys who had fallen, including many buried anonymously far from home. When erected in 1904 most of the living veterans were in their sixties and seventies. In May 2017 the county commissioners voted to remove the monument, which had become fondly known to most residents during the previous 113 years as Old Joe.

After the vote one audience member raised her hand to ask a question. The Chair recognized Nansea Markham who is President of the local UDC chapter. She asked, “What will you do with the memorial?”

The county attorney explained that the statue would be sold at auction if it was worth over $2,000. Otherwise Joe would be scrapped.

Nansea stood and held an old document at shoulder height before saying, “I’m sorry. You cannot do that.” Motioning with the papers she added, “This is the original 1903 document pertinent to Old Joe’s legal status. It shows that he remains the property of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.”

The commissioners held an impromptu conference as the audience looked on. Afterward the Chair announced that the commission would give the UDC sixty days to accept the return of Old Joe. He added that if the offer was accepted the UDC would be responsible for all moving expenses and must complete the move within sixty days of acceptance. One commissioner that voted to remove the statue had previously announced that he would not allow the county to spend a single dime to move the memorial. He would rather it be destroyed.

Although Nansea was relieved for one last chance to save Old Joe her chapter had less than $1,000 in the bank. Given the security requirements and care required to safely relocate so old a structure, she worried that the task was too difficult. The next morning, however, she began to get supportive phone calls and emails. Many previously silent sympathizers recognized her from earlier Old Joe hearings before the commission and other local organizations during the preceding two years.

One phone call from a Vietnam vet lit a fire in her heart. He explained that the American soldier’s creed requires that a warrior “never leave a fallen comrade.” He told Nansea, “That’s how I see Old Joe’s situation. You are rescuing him. He is a veteran and I cannot leave him fallen on the ground to be scrapped.  I will send you money.” Realizing that many older Americans now cringe with shame at how they treated returning Vietnam vets in the 1960s and 70s, Nansea reasoned that the same might apply to Old Joe in the years ahead.

Thereafter she took every phone call and replied to every email. Many originated beyond Florida’s borders, including states above the Mason-Dixon Line. She took suggestions such as creating a FaceBook page and a GoFundMe Internet site. But she never directly asked for money. It started arriving anyway. She mobilized the UDC chapter members to send a hand-written “thank you” note to every donor. On July 20, 2017 she notified the county commission: “We [the UDC chapter] accept the Confederate Soldier Statue.”

Her laconic acceptance prompted repeated media inquiries that included national organizations such as The Washington Post and National Public Radio. She took the phone calls but politely declined to be interviewed or quoted. “Why?” asked one NPR reporter. “An interview would add publicity to help you raise money required to move the statue.”

“That’s true,” said Nansea, “but it might also attract unwanted attention. My job is to get Old Joe safely moved. I don’t want publicity that might trigger vandals.”

By mid-August the Gainesville UDC had raised $30,000 and secured a site for Old Joe on private property near a cemetery that contained the bodies of some Confederate veterans. The county attorney required Nansea to sign a twelve-page agreement that held the UDC chapter liable for any damages caused by Old Joe’s removal. Her group was also responsible for security in the event of interference from protestors.

Unfortunately, violent anti-Joe demonstrators were a genuine threat. They realized that the county government would not protect the memorial. As a result, they eagerly awaited the day of the move when they assumed the media would be present. But Nansea fooled them. In the days leading up to the move she organized theatrics in which volunteers pretended to be dissembling Old Joe but did little actual work. Rain arrived on the true moving day. It was enough to keep the protestors away until the moving crew was ready to drive off.

Although a dubious zeitgeist drove Old Joe from public property, his valor remains intact. The Kirby Smith Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy rescued it.

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9 thoughts on “Rescuing Old Joe

  1. Pingback: Well Done is Better Than Well Said | Civil War Chat

  2. Mosby Friend

    God Bless the UDC and Mrs. Markham and all who supported the effort. It’s a shame that the patriotic organizations of yesteryear are gone.

    Reply
  3. Harris Syed

    Well, Florida has become the least Southern state despite retaining ties to the Confederacy. The northern (no pun intended) half of the state is still culturally Southern like say Georgia or Alabama but the southern (again no pun intended) half of Florida has become a tropical Northeastern hybrid spurred by the creation of the modern city of Miami whch attracts a lot of snowbirds (People living in snow-heavy areas who migrate to warmer areas) from the North and Canada as well as other places here. Because of this, it’s why these comissioners you describe are in charge of Gainesville.

    Reply
    1. Phil Leigh Post author

      Gainesville is in the northern part of Florida’s peninsula but it is also the home of the University of Florida where anti-Southern professors dominate the history department.

      Reply
  4. Sean Michael Chick

    A good and hopeful story overall, but one with a dark heart. The desire to destroy this statue was palpable, and every remove supporter who says they do not want to destroy these, must condemn those who are so willing to destroy monuments to common soldiers. But they won’t, as they fear the backlash.

    The Left’s attack on statues to common men is another sign that on class issues they are idiots. God save them if Republicans ever become smart on that issue.

    Reply
    1. Phil Leigh Post author

      The politicians are yielding to a vocal minority.

      During the two years of debate about Old Joe’s future the County Commissioners proposed to leave him in place but encouraged his opponents to put statues to their heroes on the same ground. It was not good enough.

      One of the commissioners eventually concluded that Old Joe must go because he “researched Southern history” during the two years of wrangling over the monument and concluded that “there’s nothing to be proud about in Southern history.” I leave it to you to guess which books he read to come to his conclusion.

      People like you, Sean, are in a position to influence the opinions of such politicians by the history you write.

      Reply
      1. Sean Michael Chick

        Thank you Phil. I can only do so much in general, and even then any more forward attempt would bring down a mob of condemnation which, because of a particular moral cowardice that I call “HR Department Syndrome” means I will be left out to dry. But I do what I can where I can.

        “…his opponents to put statues to their heroes on the same ground. It was not good enough.” – This sums up perfectly our new age. The Left, having won the culture war, is intent on scorching the earth to create a new world. I think that in the long term this strategy will fail, but not before it does a lot of damage to a lot of things. All attempts to make a new world are built on the ashes of your predecessor.

      2. Phil Leigh Post author

        It’s the same reason Trump became President. The Republicans were too scared to provide a “respectable” candidate that would challenge political correctness. They all wanted to be respected by the mainstream media. But they’ll never get that respect.

        Similarly, the academy will never give respect to anyone who challenges the dominant North-good/South-evil interpretation of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Contrary opinions must be voiced elsewhere.

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