MEMPHIS (AP) — A Tennessee nonprofit group has handed over statues of Confederate leaders Nathan Bedford Forrest and Jefferson Davis to the Sons of Confederate Veterans, two years after they were removed from public parks in Memphis, officials said Tuesday.
The statues of Forrest and Davis have been given to Forrest's descendants and the Sons of Confederate Veterans "to display them as they wish," City of Memphis legal officer Bruce McMullen said.
The statues' location was not disclosed, but they could be re-erected at some point. However, as part of the agreement to hand over the monuments, the veterans' group is not allowed to put the statues back up in Memphis or Shelby County, said Van Turner, president of Greenspace Inc., the private nonprofit that helped bring down the statues.
Private donations helped pay for transfer of the heavy statues on large trucks at a remote location, Turner said.
"We're talking several tons," Turner said. "So, it was an operation."
Memphis and the Confederate veterans' group have battled in court over the statues' removal from two city parks. Forrest's equestrian statue, which stood over the grave of the Confederate general and his wife, and the monument of Davis, the Confederate president, were taken down under the cover of night on Dec. 20, 2017.
At the time, Tennessee law limited the removal or changing of historical memorials on public property. Memphis used a loophole in the historical preservation law by selling the public parks to Greenspace, the private nonprofit.
Greenspace removed the monuments, which were then stored at an undisclosed location. However, the remains of Forrest and his wife are still buried at the park where his statue stood for decades.
Davidson County Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle has ruled that the removals did not violate state law because the statues were on private property when removed.
The state Supreme Court ruled in October that it would not hear an appeal by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
The General Assembly has passed a bill making it harder for cities to get around the law. They approved a measure barring cities from selling or transferring property that has historic memorials without permission from the Tennessee Historical Society — or a court.
Forrest was a slave trader in Memphis before leading a cavalry in the Confederate army. He became a leader of the early Ku Klux Klan after the Civil War.
Davis was a U.S. senator from Mississippi who became Confederate president during the war.
H. Edward Phillips, a lawyer for Forrest's family and the Confederate veterans' group, said Forrest's descendants were glad to have closure on the statues.
Forrest's relatives have sued the city over the buried remains, which could be moved. Turner said that issue is currently being addressed.
Turner also acknowledged that the Forrest statue's removal helped ease concerns from potential investors in Memphis' growing medical district, where Forrest Park had been located. It is now named Health Sciences Park.
"We are a Southern city, but it does not mean we have to live in the past," said Turner, a former county commissioner and current head of the NAACP in Memphis.
"But for those things which are not as appealing to everyone, we need to move beyond those things," Turner said. "I think this was the right time to do it."