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Louisiana could put removed Confederate monuments on display at state parks

1 hour 10 minutes ago Monday, May 11 2026 May 11, 2026 May 11, 2026 3:49 PM May 11, 2026 in News
Source: Louisiana Illuminator
PHOTO: Statue of old P.G.T. Beauregard in New Orleans, Louisiana, removed in 2017

BATON ROUGE (LA Illuminator) — Louisiana might move Confederate monuments that have been taken down by local governments to state parks.

State lawmakers are considering a proposed law that would transfer any “historical statue or monument” owned by a government and removed from a public display on or after Aug. 1, 2006, to the Office of State Parks.

The Office of State Parks, run by the lieutenant governor, would be required to relocate the monument to a place that could be accessed by the public, according to House Bill 1215. Its new location could not be in the same parish where the monument originally stood.

Under the bill, the state park system would also be required to provide signs for each monument at its new location that present “accurate historical context.” This would include the circumstances under which the monument was both erected and removed.

The legislation, sponsored by state Rep. Mike Bayham, R-Chalmette, passed the Louisiana House of Representatives on a 78-14 vote last week. The Louisiana Senate must also approve the proposal for it to become law.

The bill addresses monuments and statute removal more generally and doesn’t reference Confederate monuments in particular. But Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser, a Republican, said in an interview it was designed to deal with Confederate monuments taken down in New Orleans in 2017.

Three of the four Confederate monuments New Orleans removed that year still sit in city-owned storage, said Nungesser, who worked with Bayham on the bill.

The fourth, a 19th-century obelisk honoring a white supremacist revolt called the Battle of Liberty Place, was supposed to be on display at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles as part of a wider exhibit on removed Confederate monuments earlier this year, according to The New Orleans Times-Picayune.

Lafayette and Shreveport also took down statues of Confederate figures from public property in 2021 and 2022. They have been relocated to a Confederate cemetery in Kentwood and a battlefield in DeSoto Parish, respectively, according to news reports.

Bayham and Nungesser, who are white, said the intent of the proposed law is to preserve monuments in a thoughtful way.

Nungesser said he has consulted with a group of Black pastors about the signs and descriptions that would be put up to explain the monuments. The language would be truthful, even if it reflects a painful history, he said.

“I’m hoping this is something that can bring people together and is not a divide,” Nungesser said. “It’s history. Telling the story, both good and bad, is not a bad thing.”

Bayham said lawmakers in other states have introduced legislation that would restore or replace Confederate monuments that had been taken down. He wanted to craft a more sensitive solution for Louisiana.

“I think this is the way for us to handle this in a much more respectful manner,” Bayham said.
Dozens of Confederate monuments were put up across Southern states, including in Louisiana, decades after the end of the Civil War. Their erection coincided with the rise in Jim Crow laws, which mandated segregation by race, and an increase in violence against Black people, according to 64 Parishes, a magazine about Louisiana history.

The issue of what to do with New Orleans monuments is coming up nearly a decade after their removal because of a change in city leadership, the lieutenant governor said.

Nungesser said he had a hard time reaching an agreement on a monument plan with former New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell, who served from 2018 until earlier this year. As a member of the New Orleans City Council, Cantrell voted in favor of removing the monuments taken down by Mayor Mitch Landrieu’s administration.

If the bill passes, Nungesser would not need permission from current Mayor Helena Moreno or the City Council to gain control of the monuments. It would automatically transfer authority over them to his office.

Moreno could not be reached via phone to answer questions about the bill. City Council President J.P. Morrell declined to comment Sunday, saying he wasn’t familiar with Bayham’s proposal.

Where the monuments would go and who would pay for their transfer is not clear.

In 2018, Nungesser backed a plan to move them to Houma House plantation in Ascension Parish, a private estate New Orleans businessman Kevin Kelly owns.

If Bayham’s bill is approved, Nungesser said the monuments would likely go to one of Louisiana’s 16 historical sites located in state parks outside New Orleans.

“It would probably be at a park that is relevant to that particular monument,” Bayham said last month during a legislative committee hearing on his legislation.

The bill is structured to deflect any cost for the transfer of the monuments from local governments. Bayham and Nungesser said they expect private funding will be put up to cover the relocation expenses.

“We are not going to use state dollars to move the statues,” Nungesser said in an interview.

The legislation comes at a particularly fraught time for Black and white elected officials in Louisiana.

Gov. Jeff Landry suspended its U.S. House races scheduled to take place at the end of the week, giving the legislature’s Republican majority time to enact a new congressional map that will likely remove one or both of Louisiana’s Black congressmen.

The legislature has also passed a new law to eliminate the elected position of Orleans Parish clerk of criminal court, a seat held by Black officials for decades. The new measure blocked a Black man, Calvin Duncan, from assuming the office despite being resoundingly elected in November.

Bills to eliminate New Orleans judgeships, some of which are filled by elected Black people, have also advanced this session.

Still, Black and white lawmakers have avoided the mention of New Orleans or Confederate monuments during public discussions of Bayham’s bill. When it came up for a vote Thursday in the Louisiana House, no representatives spoke out against the proposal before it was approved.

The closest lawmakers have come to acknowledging the bill was meant to address Confederate monuments was a question from state Rep. Beth Anne Billings, R-Destrehan, during the bill’s initial committee hearing last month.

“So they will be spread out? There’s not going to be a risk of overcrowding where there is this monument park and it doesn’t have any context?” Billings asked Bayham.

Bayham responded that the intention of the legislation was not to create one large monument park, but neither representative acknowledged the concern would presumably be about a Confederate-specific monument park.

On the House floor, the New Orleans delegation split their votes on the legislation.

Reps. Delisha Boyd, Dana Henry, Stephanie Hilferty, Alonzo Knox and Shaun Mena voted for the bill. Reps. Aimee Freeman, Mandie Landry, Ed Murray and Candace Newell voted against the proposal. Rep. Jacob Braud, R-Chalmette, whose district includes a section of New Orleans, was absent for the vote.

State Rep. Edmond Jordan, D-West Baton Rouge, declined to comment on Bayham’s legislation as the head of the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus. Jordan was also absent for the vote on Bayham’s bill and said he wanted to study it further before making a statement.

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