A statue of tennis legend Arthur Ashe was spray painted with the words "White Lives Matter" and "WLM" on Wednesday in Richmond, Virginia. By Christopher Brito Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com.On Richmond's Monument Avenue, the collection of towering statues honoring Confederate veterans was interrupted by one noticeably different: a monument to Black tennis legend and civil rights activist Arthur Ashe.The Ashe statue seemed safe from defacement during recent protests over racism and police brutality, when protesters covered Confederate statues with graffiti and pulled down a statue of Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States during the Civil War.But after someone painted “White Lives Matter” on Ashe's statue, city officials considered a request from Ashe’s family to temporarily remove the statue to protect it. All rights reserved. While a debate about statues and monuments is ongoing throughout the country, Harris thinks the solution is simple. Get all the sports news you need, direct to your inbox.Despite the statue being vandalized during recent protests, and his family asking for it to come down, the statue of tennis legend Arthur Ashe will remain up on Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia.Several statues in Richmond were removed in recent weeks following George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis police custody in May — which sparked widespread protests and movements across the country. Amid the protests that have followed the death of George Floyd, at least one of those statues has been Christopher Brito is a social media producer and trending writer for CBS News, focusing on sports and stories that involve issues of race and culture.Be in the know.
Virginia Gov. Disagreement persisted into 1996 as, on New Year’s Day, Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe, Arthur’s widow, penned an op-ed column in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, preferring the idea of the statue … A statue honoring tennis great Arthur Ashe was vandalized amid protests in the late icon's hometown of Richmond, Virginia.
Arthur Ashe is memorialized in Richmond, Virginia with a bronze statue, showing the African-American tennis player and humanitarian surrounded by children—holding a … Then the guy came back...and left 2/4 He was captured on camera leaving and then returning to remove the Black Lives Matter signs that were already there while others were seen removing the racist slogan.After being confronted by a group, the man, who was wearing a bandana with an American flag covering his face and blue shirt, said, "Don't all lives matter? Three years after his death, his monument was erected in 1996 to counterbalance statues on the avenue filled with Virginian Confederate veterans.
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Ralph Northam ordered that statue's removal last month, but it has been at least temporarily blocked by a lawsuit.Harris said he believes his uncle's statue “stands for everything the people are working for right now.”Ashe, a Richmond native, was denied access to tennis courts as a child because of segregation. Why is it okay to spray paint on this statue Black Lives Matter and not White Lives Matter, what's the difference?" Ralph Northam ordered its removal in June, per the Associated Press, however an ongoing lawsuit has blocked the order.Ashe, a Richmond native, was the first Black man to ever win singles titles at the U.S. Open, Wimbledon and the Australian Open, and the first to ever make it onto a United States Davis Cup team. So, as a “contingency plan” during the height of the protests, Ashe’s family asked the city to take it down to protect it.
Police are investigating after the statue of civil rights activist and legendary tennis player Arthur Ashe in Richmond, Virginia was found Wednesday vandalized with "White Lives Matter" graffiti. It is not known if he is the person responsible for the White Lives Matter slogan. All rights reserved. The statue of Mr. Ashe, a Richmond native, was defaced with “WLM” and “White Lives Matter.”.
Get your Fantasy Football league up and running today!Removing monuments is the easy part.
Ashe's nephew said Friday that the statue isn’t going anywhere.“It's not going to be taken down,” David Harris Jr. said.Harris said he contacted Mayor Levar Stoney's office last month about taking down the statue until the civil unrest in Richmond calmed down.Harris said the request was a “contingency plan” only during the height of the protests over the May 25 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, when there were almost nightly clashes between police and protesters, and the Ashe family worried that the statue would be damaged or someone would try to topple it.“We were just considering it at the height of the protesting so that if any credible threats came through Mayor Stoney had the leeway to do it without having any pushback from us if he felt the need to take it down," Harris said.Stoney’s spokesman, Jim Nolan, said Friday that the mayor is “going to listen to the family” and not remove the statue.On July 1, Stoney ordered the immediate removal of all city-owned Confederate statues in Richmond, a onetime capital of the Confederacy.
She noted that the man they came across "wasn't alone in his sentiments."
"Before leaving in a car with a South Carolina license plate, the man identified himself as "Everybody" and claimed to have gone to a local high school in the area. Video on social media showed a man who was at the memorial appearing to defend the White Lives Matter signs. He was later named a captain of the team in 1981, inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame in 1985 and awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1993. Countless old Confederate monuments have been torn down, too, including one in Richmond of Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States during the Civil War.Ashe’s statue in the city, however, had “White Lives Matter” painted on it last month. The statue memorializing Arthur Ashe, the tennis legend and civil rights activist, will not be moving from Richmond’s Monument Avenue. All market data delayed 20 minutes. See our A statue of African American tennis legend Arthur Ashe in Virginia was defaced with the words “White Lives Matter,” police said Wednesday. By clicking “I agree” below, you consent to the use by us and our third-party partners of cookies and data gathered from your use of our platforms.