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KKK Leader’s Name Erased, But What About UT’s Confederate Statues

Last week, the University of Texas System Board of Regents voted unanimously to change the name of Simkins Residence Hall at the University of Texas at Austin.

In defiance of the 1954 Brown ruling that deemed unconstitutional educational segregation, UT leaders named the newly constructed residence hall after William Stewart Simkins, the deceased longtime UT law professor who previously served as a Confederate colonel and prominent Florida Ku Klux Klan leader. 

Simkins was one of the many White men who failed to sustain slavery but succeeded in instituting a neo-slavery of perpetual violent harassment, unimaginable economic exploitation, and social and cultural degradation for African-Americans in the final decades of the 19th century and into the 20th century.

The name change calmed the tumult that erupted in May when former UT law professor Tom Russell published an expose on the life story of Simkins in a journal. UT convened a 21-member advisory group that deliberated for weeks to study and make recommendations on the issue. The hall was renamed Creekside Residence Hall after its adjacent area called Creekside Park.

Without a doubt, UT’s move to erase Simkins is admirable. It was quick. It was efficient. It appears the university did not have be pushed, prodded and pressured to do the right thing by its Black UT community.

Unfortunately, though, the erasure of one avowed racist from a building (that may not even be around much longer) means little if you were to walk onto UT’s campus and see what is still there. If you were to pace over to UT’s South Mall you would see four imposing bronze statues of Southern leaders, including Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederate States, and Robert E. Lee, the famed Confederate general. You would see statues of men, who, if it was up to them, the vast majority of African-Americans would still be enslaved.

You would also see the anchor of the mall, Littlefield Fountain, which glorifies the Confederacy with an inscription on a stone wall that reads: “To the men and women of the Confederacy who fought with valor and suffered with fortitude that states rights be maintained.” States rights? They need a solid historian to replace it with “slavery be maintained.”

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