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  <title>Confederate monument in Indy and Camp Morton</title>
  <description>Following the recent dismantling in an&amp;amp;nbsp;Indianapolis&amp;amp;nbsp;park of a Confederate monument that originally marked the graves of prisoners of war who died at a Union Army camp,&amp;amp;nbsp;Hoosier History Live&amp;amp;nbsp;will explore the historic context of various aspects of the controversy. Several guests will participate during the show: an expert on&amp;amp;nbsp;Civil War&amp;amp;nbsp;history, including the former&amp;amp;nbsp;Camp Morton&amp;amp;nbsp;and Confederate sympathizers in Indiana during the war; an IUPUI professor who has researched the history of the monument that was moved from a former cemetery to&amp;amp;nbsp;Garfield Park&amp;amp;nbsp;on the city's south side; and a civic leader who oversees presentations about African-American history in the state. Civil War historian&amp;amp;nbsp;Steve Towne, the author of&amp;amp;nbsp;Surveillance and Spies in the Civil War&amp;amp;nbsp;(Ohio University Press) and other books and award-winning articles about the Civil War, is an archivist at&amp;amp;nbsp;IUPUI. His colleague&amp;amp;nbsp;Paul Mullins, an anthropology professor,&amp;amp;nbsp;has researched the Confederate monument, which he notes was placed initially at&amp;amp;nbsp;Greenlawn Cemetery&amp;amp;nbsp;in 1909.&amp;amp;nbsp; Greenlawn, the first major public cemetery in Indianapolis, was located near the&amp;amp;nbsp;White River&amp;amp;nbsp;and Kentucky Avenue, a site that was prone to flooding and later became increasingly industrialized. The monument, funded by the federal government, was a mass marker for 1,616 Confederate POWs whose remains could not be identified individually. Their remains were moved to&amp;amp;nbsp;Crown Hill Cemetery, Greenlawn's successor as the city's major graveyard; the reburial site at Crown Hill is known as&amp;amp;nbsp;Confederate Mound. According to Paul Mullins, the POWs' remains were reburied at Confederate Mound in 1931. Along with Steve Towne and Paul Mullins, our guests during the show will include&amp;amp;nbsp;Ophelia Wellington, founder of&amp;amp;nbsp;Freetown Village, a living history museum she created in 1982 to teach African-American history. During our show, Steve Towne will share insights about conditions at Camp Morton, which was created for the induction and training of Union Army soldiers on a site near 19th and Alabama streets that previously had served as the state fairgrounds. During the course of the war, Camp Morton primarily served as a POW camp for Confederate soldiers and sailors; by the end of the war, about 1,700 had died there. Today, much of the&amp;amp;nbsp;Herron-Morton Place Neighborhood&amp;amp;nbsp;is on the site of Camp Morton. With the moves of the POWs' remains, many could not be identified. The relocation of the federally-funded monument (with a metal plate at the base that lists the names of the POWs) from Greenlawn to Garfield Park was advocated by the&amp;amp;nbsp;Southern Club of Indianapolis, which Paul Mullins will describe during our show. The placement of the monument in a public park in the late 1920s has been controversial for several years. Since the June 8 dismantling, it has been stored at an undisclosed location. It is not the only Confederate monument, memorial or marker in Indiana. According to the&amp;amp;nbsp;Indiana Historical Bureau, a&amp;amp;nbsp;state historic marker in the Franklin County town of Laurel, birthplace of a Confederate brigadier general, is under review for &amp;quot;misleading and inaccurate statements&amp;quot; as well as the lack of proper historic context on the signage. In&amp;amp;nbsp;Terre Haute, an&amp;amp;nbsp;obelisk at Woodlawn Cemetery&amp;amp;nbsp;memorializes eleven Confederates who died in a POW camp in the city. The phone lines will be opened earlier than usual during our show for listeners' questions and comments.    &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Hoosier History Live</author_name>
  <author_url>http://hoosierhistorylive.libsyn.com/website</author_url>
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