White and Black soldiers are segregated on Loudoun County's World War I memorial
White and Black soldiers are segregated on Loudoun County's World War I memorial -- white on top, Black on bottom. Now one supervisor wants to change that.
By Nathaniel Cline, ncline@loudountimes.com Aug 6, 2020 Updated 13 hrs ago
The bronze plaque on the Loudoun County World War I Memorial has stood in the heart of Leesburg for nearly 100 years. Located on the county courthouse grounds, the plaque lists the names of the 30 service members from Loudoun who died during war. Segregated by two engraved lines, on top are the names of 27 white service members; below are three Black men who equally gave their lives for America.
The dividing line may soon be gone.
Loudoun County Supervisor Mike Turner (D-Ashburn) said he plans to propose a new plaque that would alphabetize the names. Turner is aiming to offer a motion to the board in September after the supervisors August break. If approved, the Ashburn supervisor hopes a re-dedication ceremony can be held in 2022, the 100th anniversary of the memorials installation.
I knew I wanted it changed, it couldnt stay the way it was, Turner, a retired Air Force colonel, said. I never wanted the memorial removed that was never my intent. It was always to replace the engraving in a way that reflects the sacrifice of the men who are listed on the plaque and also in a way that reflects justice in America.
Loudoun County and other localities across Virginia were given the authority by state lawmakers to remove, relocate or contextualize war memorials in this years General Assembly session. The law went into effect in July.
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