The monument in 2015 | |
![]() Interactive map of African-American Monument | |
| Location | River Street,Savannah,Georgia,United States |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 32°04′54″N81°05′27″W / 32.081711°N 81.090884°W /32.081711; -81.090884 |
| Designer | Dorothy Spradley |
| Material | Bronze Granite (pedestal) |
| Height | 11 feet (3.4 m) |
| Dedicated date | July 27, 2002 |
| Dedicated to | African Americans |
TheAfrican-American Monument is a publicmonument inSavannah,Georgia,United States, dedicated in 2002. Located nearRiver Street along the city's waterfront with theSavannah River, the monument commemoratesAfrican Americans in the city and highlights the "invisible story of the Trans Atlantic slave trade".[1] The monument consists of fourstatues depicting an African American family atop a granitepedestal.
Efforts towards erecting the monument was spearheaded by Abigail Jordan, anAfrican American activist from the city who spent several decades trying to get the monument created.[1] According to a 2001 article in theLos Angeles Times, "none of the more than 40 plaques, pillars and statues" in the city paid tribute to African Americans.[2] In 1998, the city's Historic Site and Monument Commission approved the monument and passed the proposal on to thecity council to vote on it.[2]
In January 2001, the city council approved the monument, but deferred action on a decision regarding a quote byMaya Angelou that would appear on the base of the monument.[2] The proposed quote would have read, in part, "We lay back to belly in the holds of theslave ships in each others’ excrement and urine together, sometimes died together, and our lifeless bodies thrown overboard together."[2][3][4] At the time, the quote was considered controversial in part due to the monument's proposed location along theSavannah Riverpromenade, which was one of the biggesttourist attractions in the city.[2][3] Jordan claimed that she had fought back against the insistences of some city council members who proposed placing the monument at a church rather than the promenade.[2] David Jones, an African American city council member at the time, had the following to say about the quote: “Maya Angelou’s description was a little far out. I myself wouldn’t want to be reminded of that every time I look at it. History . . . can hurt.”[4]Savannah MayorFloyd Adams Jr. was also opposed to the quote.[3] In January 2002, Angelou submitted to the city council the following addition to the quote: "Today, we are standing up together, with faith and even some joy." This amended version of the inscription was unanimously agreed upon by the city council in May of that year.[3]
In total, the cost of the monument was $350,000, with $30,000 provided by the city to prepare the site and the rest of the money raised through donations.[2] The monument was sculpted by Dorothy Radford Spradley (born 1946).[5] The monument was dedicated on July 27, 2002.[5] In July 2019, a plaque was added to the base of the monument describing the efforts of Abigail Jordan to erect the monument.[6]
The monument, which stands approximately 11 feet (3.4 m) tall,[6] consists of abronze depiction of an African American family.[3] These four statues, dressed in modernattire, stand atop a granite pedestal. At the statues' feet are broken chains.[6]