SLRC in
the News
13 October 2002
Southern
Pride Fuels 1,300-mile March
By ROBERT STACY MCCAIN
The Washington Times
ASHEVILLE, NC -- The South has seen historic marches before,
such as Union Gen. William T. Sherman's "March to the Sea" in 1864
and the voting rights march in 1965 from Selma to Montgomery, Ala.
H.K. Edgerton hopes to add a new chapter to
that history tomorrow, when he begins his one-man "March Across Dixie
for Southern Heritage."
Mr. Edgerton, 55, will be wearing a
Confederate uniform and flying the Confederate flag as he marches the 1,300
miles from his hometown of Asheville, N.C., to Austin, Texas, to stir
Southern pride and raise money to defend the banner he calls "the
Christian Cross of St. Andrew." The journey is expected to take more
than three months.
"My march is a march of heritage, not
one of hate, to bring an awareness of the pride we feel," said Mr.
Edgerton, past president of the Asheville branch of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). "There are folks who
look like me who care a lot about Dixie."
For several years, Mr. Edgerton has been
involved in pro-Confederate protests — taking a stand that has brought him
criticism from some fellow blacks.
"When you put the Confederate flag in
your hand, a lot of emotion is generated," he said in an interview.
"I get a lot of verbal abuse, but I get 10-to-1 more love than I get
abuse."
Even when he was an officer of the NAACP, Mr.
Edgerton said, he did not share the sentiment expressed in a 1991 NAACP
resolution that denounced the Confederate flag as an "ugly symbol of
idiotic white supremacy" and "an odious blight upon the
universe."
"I saw the resolution that came down
from the national office about the Confederate flag, but for me, that was
never part of my agenda," Mr. Edgerton said. "My NAACP was a fight
for social and economic mobility for all people."
He is now chairman of the board of directors
of the Southern Legal Resource Center (SLRC), a nonprofit group that
specializes in courtroom defenses of Confederate symbols.
"We're basically the ACLU for
Confederate heritage," explained SLRC Chief Counsel Kirk Lyons, who
said the SLRC has received more than 200 requests for legal help in
defending Southern heritage in the past two years.
Most of those cases involve students at
schools where the Confederate flag has been banned. Most recently, the SLRC
settled a case in Madison County, Ky., where a student had been forbidden to
wear a Hank Williams Jr. concert T-shirt that depicted the flag.
"There is a depressing similarity to
these cases," Mr. Lyons said. "The principal makes a decision to
ban Confederate symbols. The board of education circles the wagons around
the principal. And so there's no choice left but to sue."
Mr. Edgerton, whose march will raise money
for the SLRC, as well as for the Sons of Confederate Veterans Heritage
Defense Fund, said too many schools are punishing students for their
Southern pride.
"A lot of [children] have found themselves in trouble, either sent home
or expelled, for displaying the Confederate symbol, which has come under a
great deal of attack here in the Southland," Mr. Edgerton said. "I
see a great deal of these cases.
"The sad part is, we've had to turn down a lot of them simply because
of finances. Most of these families can't afford an attorney, and we can't
afford the cost of taking a lot of these heritage violations to court,"
he said.
Anti-Confederate policies at schools are the result of "political
correctness" and "institutional bias in the education
establishment," said Mr. Lyons, noting that administrators sometimes
ban Confederate T-shirts "even where the black kids have said, 'We have
no problem with the shirts.'"
Mr. Edgerton's association with the SLRC began in 1998 when he sought out
Mr. Lyons — who had won acquittal for Ku Klux Klan leader Louis Beam in a
1988 federal conspiracy trial — to help stop threatened Klan violence in
Asheville. The KKK danger was averted, and Mr. Edgerton then asked Mr. Lyons
to represent the Asheville NAACP in a lawsuit over the city's housing
policies.
The national NAACP was not pleased by Mr. Edgerton's association with Mr.
Lyons — a man denounced by left-wing groups. In 1999, Mr. Edgerton was
ousted from the presidency of the Asheville NAACP.
His subsequent decision to join the SLRC "took a great deal of
soul-searching on my part," Mr. Edgerton acknowledges.
"Our history has been lied about so much starting back in 1865, with
the Northern propaganda used to try to drive a wedge between black folks and
white folks."
He likens such propaganda to the current campaign for reparations to the
descendants of slaves: "Reparations is just another lie. I'm not
looking for reparations. That's just another way to divide white folks and
black folks.
"If you want to ask me about my ancestral roots, I am a
Confederate-American," Mr. Edgerton said. "I was born colored,
negro, then one day somebody decided to make me African-American. Nobody
asked me about that. Africa didn't want me then, and she certainly doesn't
want me now."
His "March Across Dixie" will be kicked off today with a 2 p.m.
prayer service in downtown Asheville at the monument to North Carolina's
Civil War governor, Zebulon Vance. Tomorrow, he begins his long march
through North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and
Louisiana to Texas.
Why Texas? Well, for one thing, it seems a certain former governor of that
state offended Southern heritage by removing memorial plaques from the state
Supreme Court building, which had been built with Confederate pension funds.
"Tell Mr. Bush when I get to Texas, I'm going to be asking him to
return the Confederate plaques to the Supreme Court building," Mr.
Edgerton said.
© October
13, 2002, The Washington Times