Statue To Tennis Star Arthur Ashe To Stay Put In Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — On Richmond's Monument Avenue, the collection of towering statues honoring Confederate veterans was interrupted by one noticeably different: a monument to Black tennis legend and civil rights activist Arthur Ashe.

The Ashe statue seemed safe from defacement during recent protests over racism and police brutality, when protesters covered Confederate statues with graffiti and pulled down a statue of Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States during the Civil War.

Richmond residents clean up the statue of Arthur Ashe on Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia, on June 17, 2020, after it was tagged with graffiti - A statue of African American tennis great Arthur Ashe displayed in his native Richmond, Virginia, was vandalized June 17. Carolyn McCrea, 35 years old, went to her house to pick up some material to wash the paint. "We couldn't just sit there and do nothing and see (the statue) degraded. We have so much respect for Arthur Ashe, himself a civil rights activist," says the blonde young woman, who supports the debunking of the Confederate statues. (Photo by Inès BEL AIBA / AFP) (Photo by INES BEL AIBA/AFP via Getty Images)

But after someone painted "White Lives Matter" on Ashe's statue, city officials considered a request from Ashe's family to temporarily remove the statue to protect it. Ashe's nephew said Friday that the statue isn't going anywhere.

'White Lives Matter' Sprayed On Arthur Ashe Memorial In Virginia

"It's not going to be taken down," David Harris Jr. said.

Harris said he contacted Mayor Levar Stoney's office last month about taking down the statue until the civil unrest in Richmond calmed down.

Harris said the request was a "contingency plan" only during the height of the protests over the May 25 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, when there were almost nightly clashes between police and protesters, and the Ashe family worried that the statue would be damaged or someone would try to topple it.

"We were just considering it at the height of the protesting so that if any credible threats came through Mayor Stoney had the leeway to do it without having any pushback from us if he felt the need to take it down," Harris said.

Stoney's spokesman, Jim Nolan, said Friday that the mayor is "going to listen to the family" and not remove the statue.

On July 1, Stoney ordered the immediate removal of all city-owned Confederate statues in Richmond, a onetime capital of the Confederacy. Stoney invoked his emergency powers, citing the ongoing civil unrest and concerns that protesters would get hurt if they tried to pull down the enormous statues themselves.

The only Confederate statue that remains on Monument Avenue is a memorial to Gen. Robert E. Lee located on state property. Gov. Ralph Northam ordered that statue's removal last month, but it has been at least temporarily blocked by a lawsuit.

Harris said he believes his uncle's statue "stands for everything the people are working for right now."

Ashe, a Richmond native, was denied access to tennis courts as a child because of segregation. He went on to become the first Black player selected to the U.S. Davis Cup team and was the only Black man to ever win the singles title at the U.S. Open, Wimbledon and the Australian Open. He was also well-known for his work to promote education and civil rights, to oppose apartheid in South Africa and to raise awareness about AIDS, the disease that eventually killed him in 1993.

Ashe's statue was erected in 1996, but only after rancorous debate.

"If we're going to put up a statue of somebody, let's put up a statue of somebody that stands for equality, that stands for education, all the things that my uncle held true," Harris said.

(© Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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