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A statue of Christopher Columbus. Photo: Metro Voice.

Christopher Columbus statue in St. Louis next to go?

The move to erase America’s history from parks and historical sites continues. Now, a Christopher Columbus statue in a popular St. Louis park is being investigated for possible removal about a year after a Confederate monument was removed from another park in the city.

A commission is being formed to review whether the 130-year-old statue belongs in Tower Grove Park, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. The panel will include historians, art experts, and representatives of Italian-Americans and Native Americans in St. Louis, said David Lauber, the park’s director of development.

“We’ve been aware in recent years that this is an issue,” Lauber said. “We know that it’s time to have a discussion.”

The commission will eventually make long-term recommendations regarding the statue’s future to the park’s Board of Commissioners.

The statue has been repeatedly covered with graffiti during the last two years, with words including “murderer” and “Black Lives Matter” being painted onto the base. The Tower Grove Park statue is just one of several Columbus monuments across the U.S. that have been vandalized as a movement to destroy evidence of historical figures, good or bad, has intensified.

Supporters have said the statue represents a part of American history, while opponents have argued it’s a reminder of “oppression” and shouldn’t be featured in a public space.

St. Louis resident Chris Singer is organizing a public forum for residents to discuss why they believe the statue should be removed. His words, though, did not leave much room for those that defend the statue.

“I know that it had a history of being targeted with vandalism, and I knew from the Confederate statue (in Forest Park) being an issue also, that there’s enough momentum,” Singer said. “I thought it was a good time to take it to the public.”

Park founder Henry Shaw commissioned artist Ferdinand von Miller to create the statute. It’s been a fixture in the park since it was dedicated in 1886.

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