Slate map of Civil War memorials
Mapping
Confederate Monuments in the United States
Protests
related to Confederate statues and monuments dominated the news over the
weekend. Two Web pages are excellent
resources for learning about the locations of these monuments around the
country.
In
2015, Slate created an animated map that
identifies memorials to the Civil War.
This map uses the Historical Marker Database, which identifies more than 13,000 locations related to the
Civil War—both the Union and Confederate sides.
Users can view the animated map to watch how and where Union and
Confederate markers were built over time. Then users can zoom in to explore individual
markers on the map and read the inscriptions of the monuments.
The
Southern Poverty Law Center launched a campaign to catalog and map Confederate
place names and other symbols across the nation. An interactive OpenStreetMap identifies
monuments, schools, parks, mountains, roads and other public places named for
Confederate figures.
The
Center has identified 1,503 symbols: 718
monuments and statues; 109 public schools; 80 counties and cities; nine
official Confederate holidays celebrated in six states; and 10 military
bases. Virginia, North Carolina, and
Georgia are the states with the most places, but Confederate place names are
found in 31 states and the District of Columbia.
For
more information about using current events maps for research and learning
projects, please contact the Ball State University Libraries GIS Research and
Map Collection.
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