Christopher Columbus removed statue from Camden's Farnham Park

Camden residents were upset after the city removed the Christopher Columbus statue located in Farnham Park on Thursday. Protestors claim that the city took down the statue after finding out that residents had planned a march through the park on Saturday.
Screenshot/Google Street View

Camden officials removed the Christopher Columbus statue in Farnham Park on Thursday. 

The monument has "long pained the residents of the community," Mayor Frank Moran said in a statement. "Previously, there have been requests to remove the statue as the community no longer supports the monument. It is long overdue, but we must now establish a plan to reexamine these outdated symbols of racial division and injustices."


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The statue's removal was met with frustration from residents who had planned a demonstration in the park on Saturday, NBC10 reported, and as city workers loaded the statue onto a truck Thursday evening, people started to gather. Those involved in the planning of Saturday's protest claimed the city had agreed to keep the statue in the park for their demonstration then remove it later. 

Protestors blocked the city vehicle from leaving, and rolled the Columbus statue off the truck's bed and onto the ground where its head wa broken off as the crowd chanted, "No justice, no peace." 

"This is what happens when you promise the residents one thing, and you try to do another thing," Rev. Levi Coombs III, a pastor at First Refuge Progressive Baptist Church, told NBC10. "We do stand up. We do rise up." 

Christopher Columbus statues have been toppled throughout the United States during protests following the death of George Floyd, who died in the custody of Minneapolis police on May 25 after an officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Columbus has become notorious for his violent treatment of the indigenous populations in North America.

Though, not everyone agrees.

"Columbus is an important symbol to Italian Americans, and actually those statues, such as the one in New York and so forth, were really an atonement to Italian Americans that were discriminated against," Andre DiMino, spokesperson for Italian American One Voice Coalition, said to NJ.com

The Camden County Board of Freeholder announced on Friday it will work with the Sons of Italy, a fraternal Italian organization, to develop new artwork that "celebrates Italian heritage in Cooper River Park." Additionally, the board will initiate "a dialogue with the Sons of Italy to determine how to best repatriate their Christopher Columbus statue from the park to a private location." 

Last week, Philadelphia officials removed the statue of former Mayor Frank Rizzo, which had been located on the steps of the Municipal Services Building and been vandalized several times in recent years. The late Rizzo, who served as mayor between 1972 and 1980, has been scrutinized for his treatment of the city's black and gay communities during his time as mayor and police commissioner. 


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