Community Corner

Confederate Flag Taken Down In Kennesaw: Report

A Confederate flag in downtown Kennesaw has been taken down in the wake of an online petition calling for its removal.

KENNESAW, GA -- A Confederate flag hanging from a pole at a prominent intersection in Kennesaw has been torn down, according to news reports. The stealthy removal -- which happened overnight Tuesday -- is the second time this week the controversial emblem has been taken down, a local politician told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The developments come after a local resident started an online petition this week to get the flag removed. (SIGN UP: Get Patch's Daily Newsletter and Real Time News Alerts. Or, if you have an iPhone, download the free Patch app.)

The site where the flag was centered is at the corner of Cherokee and Main streets, not far from Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, where soldiers from the North and South squared off for three weeks in 1864.

Find out what's happening in Kennesawfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The flag is in a part of the city, Commemorative Park, where veterans, including public safety officers who died on 9/11, are honored. But the creator of the petition said that having a symbol of the Confederacy hanging high in the city square does more harm than good.

"The removal of the Confederate flag from the public flag pole in downtown Kennesaw would serve as a message to all that our community strives for equality and unity, rather than disparity and division," Reid Jones said on the petition, which has garnered more than 2,000 signatures as of midday Wednesday. (SIGN UP: Get Patch's Daily Newsletter and Real Time News Alerts. Or, if you have an iPhone, download the free Patch app.)

Find out what's happening in Kennesawfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Reid said that the purpose of the flag -- to idolize a Confederate train conductor whose actions eventually led to the deaths of eight Union sympathizers -- had outlived hits usefulness.

"The Confederate flag in Downtown Kennesaw is commemorated to William Fuller, a Confederate train conductor whose reclaiming of the General during the Civil War lead to the deaths of 8 Union raiders who attempted to acquire the train for the Union and destroy railways used to support the Confederacy. This man is not someone worth idolization or commemoration," Reid says in the online petition.

Fuller is well-known in Confederate history as the person that helped stop a plan by Union troops to steal a train from Big Shanty, Georgia (now known as Kennesaw), in what is known as the "Great Locomotive Chase." The troops successfully took off in the train, named the General, but Fuller, who initially chased the train on foot, eventually commandeered a train of his own and was able to stop the North soldiers near Chattanooga, Tenn.

Kennesaw Councilman Jimmy Dickens told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the flag has been taken down twice this week. It remains to be seen if it will be erected again.

City officials cannot remove the flag under state law because it lies in an area considered a state park, he said.

Like us on Facebook

Confederate symbols and imagery have become a hot-button issue in the wake of the tragedy in Charlottesville, Va., which erupted into violence during a white nationalist rally and march. A right-wing sympathizer, identified as James Alex Fields Jr. is facing second-degree murder, malicious wounding and failure to stop after allegedly plowing into a crowd of counter-demonstrators at the march.

Read more: Trump attacked for 'both sides' quip about Charlottesville

Thirty-two-year-old Heather Heyer, a paralegal, was killed in the melee, which has sparked a backlash against the "Unite the Right" movement and groups associated with it.

Dickens, who is Kennesaw's first black council member, said that the flag issue is a complex one and that he can empathize with both sides.

“I understand on both sides," he said, according to the AJC. "I understand how people want to represent and show their heritage with the flag and everything, but I also see the other side where people see the flag as intimidation,” he said. “... it reminds some people of a time that America wasn’t as great as it is now.”

The Confederate backlash is growing across the state. In Atlanta, Mayor Kasim Reed said that after receiving a number of petitions, the city is looking into renaming streets honoring Confederates. "I will carefully consider these petitions, because symbols matter, and as those espousing hate-filled idealogies grow bolder, we must grow stronger in defense of our values."

Remove Confederate Carving On Stone Mountain: Atlanta Lawmaker

And in Decatur, a Confederate monument on the Square is being targeted in a petition as well.

Image via Pixabay

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.