Community Corner
Confederate Monuments In Colorado: Do They Exist?
Since George Floyd's death on Memorial Day, nearly 200 Confederate monuments and symbols have been removed in numerous U.S. states.

The death of George Floyd gave renewed energy to those who have long called on state leaders in the South to remove monuments, plaques and other symbols commemorating the Confederacy.
Floyd, a Black man, died on Memorial Day while in custody of Minneapolis police. In the weeks since Floyd’s death, several states including have heeded their call, according to a new analysis by BeenVerified.
While the greatest concentration of symbols remain in former Confederate and border states, surprisingly, many exist in Northern states and states formed after the Civil War.
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While California, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and a handful of others states all house a small number, Colorado is among those with no Confederate monuments.
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Among states with monuments, Virginia, North Carolina and Texas have removed the most Confederate monuments in recent weeks. Virginia has removed 12, while North Carolina removed nine and Texas six.
The analysis used 2019 data collected from the Southern Poverty Law Center in addition to dozens of 2020 media reports to reflect Confederate symbols that have fallen in recent weeks.
Since 2013, these states have removed the most Confederate monuments and symbols, according to the analysis:
- Texas, 40 monuments
- Virginia, 30 monuments
- Florida, 17 monuments
- North Carolina, 15 monuments
- Tennessee, 11 monuments
While the analysis shows 190 Confederate symbols have been removed over the years, 1,700 still remain in states across the U.S.
Despite removing the most monuments, Virginia and Texas are also among states with the most remaining.
- Virginia, 232 monuments remaining
- Texas, 202 monuments remaining
- Georgia, 198 monuments remaining
- South Carolina, 194 monuments remaining
- North Carolina, 160 monuments remaining
- Mississippi, 147 monuments remaining
- Alabama, 121 monuments remaining
- Tennessee, 98 monuments remaining
- Louisiana, 84 monuments remaining
- Florida, 62 monuments remaining
Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis and Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson are the top Confederates with statues, roads and schools named in their honor.
Nathan Bedford Forrest, the Confederate general who was the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, has the sixth highest number of monuments.
Many remaining monuments have been the targets of vandalism in recent weeks.
To protect monuments, President Donald Trump last month issued an executive order that instructed federal law enforcement authorities to prosecute people who damage federal monuments or statues.
The order also threatened to withhold funding from local governments that fail to protect their own statues from vandals.
See the full analysis at BeenVerified.com.
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