Myron B. Pitts: Go slow in debate over Market

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1 Myron B. Pitts: Go slow in debate over Market House Posted: Thursday, July 16, :00 am George Washington owned slaves, which means the capital city of our country is named for a slave holder. His face graces our $1 bill, and quarter coins. Thomas Jefferson owned slaves, too. He's on money as well, and cities from New Hampshire to South Dakota are named for him. Keep that in mind as we debate lawyer Allen Rogers' effort to strip the Market House from the city's logo. A plaque at the building says slaves were sold there; they were definitely sold close by. Myron B. Pitts We can discuss whether we want a logo representing the past as a symbol for a city that wants to move forward. But going after the Market House feels like white washing history. Where does it stop? Do we change the name of Washington, D.C.? Rogers is not talking about tearing the building down. But if we accept the premise that the Market House only represents slavery, than that is a step toward removing it altogether. Rogers thinks the time is ripe for this debate in the wake of the racist murders in Charleston, South Carolina, but I disagree. We should give ourselves time to cool off. I like Councilman Ted Mohn's idea for the city to enlist professors from Fayetteville State and Methodist universities to research and bring out the real history of the building and move forward from there. I suspect research will underscore that Fayetteville's centerpiece structure was not a slave market, but, like George Washington, tells an expansive story far beyond that one chapter. The original building housed state government, and the U.S. Constitution was ratified there. After being rebuilt after a fire, merchants sold goods there. It is not the fault of a building that a wrongheaded society once considered human beings to be goods. Today, the Market House is a community meeting place, the site of everything from prayer vigils to anti war demonstrations to Tea Party rallies to a Black Lives Matter march. It truly belongs to all the people. Rebel flag b pitts go slow in debate over market house/article_f5ba5393 ac a55d 4fb44d9684d1.html?m 1/5

2 I wrote recently that Hope Mills should bar the Confederate battle flag from its July 4th parade and expressed satisfaction that South Carolina brought down the banner at its Statehouse grounds. Those cases were not any real honoring of history but rather people using the instrument of the flag to provoke anger or demonstrate insensitivity. The South Carolina flag was raised in the 1960s to oppose integration. The Hope Mills rebel flags are being flown in parades by one set of family and friends, and I criticized the town for allowing the display two years before Charleston. The rebel battle flag will never belong to all. I grew up in Fayetteville hearing the Market House was a slave market. In short, I heard wrong. History is messy. Slavery represents an everlasting stain on the country, and it was an American tragedy, not just a Southern one. I do wish Washington et al. had listened to our city's namesake, the Frenchman Marquis de Lafayette, who fought alongside Washington and was friends with Jefferson. He pointed out to both the contradiction between American ideals and slavery. But history is history, and trying to erase it will only leave us blind. Better to try to understand it, and learn. Columnist Myron B. Pitts can be reached at pittsm@fayobserver.com or b pitts go slow in debate over market house/article_f5ba5393 ac a55d 4fb44d9684d1.html?m 2/5

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