From The Tribune staff reports
BIRMINGHAM — The base of a Confederate monument in Alabama’s largest city was all that remained Tuesday morning after crews worked overnight to dismantle the 115-year old monument.
Workers began Monday night removing the top portion of the obelisk in pieces in Birmingham’s Linn Park, about a day after protesters tried to remove it themselves during a protest over police brutality, including the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
The Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument was dedicated in 1904 and has stood in Linn Park as a memory to a war that began as a way to continue the oppression of black people.
Live video filmed by AL.com overnight showed a flatbed truck hauling off the stone pieces in the early morning hours. It’s unclear where the pieces were being taken.
Crews were expected to return later Tuesday to finish removing the monument.
The monument had been the subject of a court battle between the city of Birmingham and the state before protesters tried to bring it down Sunday. The monument has towered over the park despite the makeup of Birmingham being over 70% black.
Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin said the city faces a fine for violating a state law that bans the removal of Confederate and other long-standing monuments. Woodfin said the cost of a fine would be more affordable than the cost of continued unrest in the city.