It was a choice to melt down Robert E. Lee. But it would have been a choice to keep him intact, too.”

Teo Armus and Hadley Green

“So the statue of the Confederate general that once stood in Charlottesville — the one that prompted the deadly ‘Unite the Right’ rally in 2017 — was now being cut into fragments and dropped into a furnace, dissolving into a sludge of glowing bronze…. With a flash of bluish white light and orange sparks, a trio of foundry workers carved seven long gashes into Lee’s severed head. ‘It’s a better sculpture right now than it’s ever been,’ one of the metal-casters said. ‘We’re taking away what it meant for some people and transforming it.'”

“[O]n Saturday the museum went ahead with its plan in secret at this small Southern foundry, in a town and state The Washington Post agreed not to name because of participants’ fears of violence… They made arrangements for Lee to be melted down while they started collecting ideas from city residents for that new sculpture…. Some [of the witnesses to the melting] said the statue was being destroyed. Others called it a restoration. Depending on who you asked, the bronze was being reclaimed, disrupted, or redeemed to a higher purpose. It was a grim act of justice and a celebration all in one….”

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Another approach: Memento Park.