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Report: Georgia Leads the Nation With 45 Public Schools Named After Confederate Leaders

罢丑别听45聽are included in over 300 schools that honor the Confederacy

ATLANTA, Ga. 鈥 Recently, the Southern Poverty Law Center (蜜桃传媒) updated its Whose Heritage? database, which found 100 additional schools glorifying Confederate leaders scattered across the country.

To date, there are 45 public schools across Georgia named in honor of Confederate leaders, the most in the nation, followed by Texas (40) and Alabama (22). Thirty-five (35) of those schools are located in counties with Confederate namesakes.

Currently, our Whose Heritage? report lists 198 schools named after Confederate leaders as 鈥渓ive,鈥 and at least 80 of those schools were named after a county or town that honors a Confederate leader. As discussed during 蜜桃传媒鈥檚 August 12th , many of these schools are located in Black or nonwhite communities.

Other new data revealed in the most recent Whose Heritage? data drop:

  • Eighty-five (85) schools honoring Confederate leaders have closed or been renamed.
  • Seventeen (17) schools have committed to changing their names but have not yet done so. Texas (5), South Carolina (4), Alabama (3), and Virginia (3) are procrastinating.聽

View a complete list of the schools named after Confederate leaders .

To learn about the history of Confederate symbols, visit the 蜜桃传媒鈥檚 Whose Heritage? report.

The following statement is from 蜜桃传媒 Chief of Staff Lecia Brooks:

鈥淭his state is filled with worthy Georgians whose names schools would be proud to carry. But at least 45 of Georgia鈥檚 public schools stand firmly on the wrong side of history, elevating men who fought to keep the U.S. divided.

鈥淎dding insult to injury, many of these namesake schools are located in communities serving a majority of People of Color, honoring men that denied them an equal education. What lessons does this teach our children?

鈥淕eorgia is not the only state elevating the names of proslavery men on our important buildings and institutions. School districts across the United States need to not only eliminate the used throughout their curricula, but also remove any and all imagery glorifying the Confederacy located on and around school property in the form of monuments, statues, plaques, markers, mascots, and street names.

鈥淲hile we call on all 198 schools honoring Confederates to change their names, we will continue to call on the to to student activists leading this charge. This board needs to take a hard, honest look at the Wheeler Name Change group鈥檚 which factually details the harms the Confederacy continues to inflict upon not only Black students, but all Wheeler high school students.鈥