Madison’s Confederate Memorials

This 1981 memorial at Forest Hill Cemetery was removed August 16, 2017. (Patrick Mack/Wisconsin State Journal)

joint Common Council committee meeting will be held on January 30 to consider the future disposition of the memorials.

The 1906 United Daughters of the Confederacy Monument (John Hart/Wisconsin State Journal)

1 “Madison Mayor Paul Soglin orders removal of Confederate monuments at Forest Hill Cemetery,” Logan Wroge, Wisconsin State Journal, Aug 18, 2017
2 “Dying like Rotten Sheepe”: Camp Randall as a Prisoner of War Facility during the Civil War. The Wisconsin Magazine of History, 92(1), 2-15. Thompson, T. (2008). Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/25482093
3 “Orton Park,” City of Madison Parks Division, retrieved 01/11/18
4 “Battle of Island Number Ten,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/10/18
5 “United Daughters of the Confederacy,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/10/18
6 “Dred Scott v. Sandford,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/10/18
7 “Sifting and winnowing,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/11/18
8 “1906 in the United States,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/11/18
9 “Murder of Michael Donald,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/10/18
10 “Madison’s uncivil Civil War”, Stu Levitan, Isthmus, June 30, 2011
11 “Arrival of Secession Prisoners,” Wisconsin Daily State Journal, April 21, 1862
12 “Confederate Prisoners at Camp Randall as Seen in Newspaper Articles,” Wisconsin Historical Society, retrieved 01/10/18
13 “History of the confederated memorial associations of the South,” Confederated Southern Memorial Association (U.S.), The Graham Press, New Orleans, 1904
14 “Civil War Soldiers,” HistoryNet, retrieved 01/11/18
15 “Wisconsin Embraced Confederate History Throughout the 20th Century,” Chris Lese, Historicalese, October 15, 2017
16 “1930 in the United States,” Wikipedia, retrieved 01/11/18
17 Forest Hill Cemetery Rules & Regulations, Board of Park Commissioners, City of Madison, May 10, 2017