DHR Announces Meeting of the Commission for the Historical Statues in the U.S. Capitol

Published July 16, 2020
Contact: Randy Jones Department of Historic Resources 540-578-3031

—Commission to meet virtually on Friday, July 24, 2020 beginning at 9:30 a.m.—

RICHMOND – The Commission for Historical Statues in the United States Capitol will hold its second public meeting on Friday, July 24. The commission will convene virtually at 9:30 a.m., and expects the meeting to last several hours. The Virginia General Assembly created the Commission for Historical Statues in the United States Capitol during its last regular session and tasked it with studying removal and replacement of the Robert E. Lee statue in the Capitol’s National Statuary Hall Collection, where each state is entitled to have two statues. Virginia’s other statue is of George Washington. Among other topics on the agenda for the forthcoming meeting, the commission will elect a chair, vice chair, and discuss whether to recommend to the General Assembly the removal of the Lee statue from the U.S. Capitol. The meeting agenda, as well as instructions for how to register and to provide a public comment, are available on the Department of Historic Resources’ website at https://www.dhr.virginia.gov/uscapitolcommission/. Registration is required for all persons wishing to attend the online July 24 meeting, and an individual must register by no later than 12 noon on Thursday, July 23. Persons wishing to provide a public comment must also register by 12 noon July 23 as well. Though the meeting agenda includes time for verbal public comment, DHR encourages written comments, which must be submitted by noon July 23 to this email address: USCapitolCommission@dhr.virginia.gov. The Capitol commission consists of eight members. Governor Ralph Northam appointed Dr. Edward Ayres and Dr. Colita Fairfax to the commission. The Virginia Senate appointed Sen. Louise Lucas, and the House of Delegates selected Del. Jeion Ward as its representative. On July 1, during the commission’s first meeting, the four appointed members elected three citizen members: Dr. Fred Motley of Danville, Chief Anne Richardson of the Rappahannock Tribe and a resident of Indian Neck, and Margaret “Margi” Vanderhye of McLean. Julie Langan, Director of the Department of Historic Resources, serves as an ex-officio member. The Department of Historic Resources, the Commonwealth’s historic preservation agency, provides administrative support to the Commission for Historical Statues in the United States Capitol. Please direct questions to DHR concerning the commission, its purpose, and the upcoming meeting.  
DHR BLOGS
Waterford Union of Churches African American Cemetery

Grave Matters: The African American Cemetery & Graves Fund

A 1985 photograph showing the original Beach Carousel road sign.

Virginia Landmarks Register Spotlight: Virginia Beach Oceanfront Motels and Hotels

View of the Rollins Tract in prince william county

Preserving the Bristoe Station Civil War Battlefield

Kingsmill historic sites excavations

Kingsmill Revisited: The Skiffes Creek Curation and Conservation Project

Members of the Chesapeake Archaeology Lab (CAL) at the University of William & Mary

An Overview: The DHR Threatened Sites Grant Program

054-5479_Cuckoo_School_2023_exterior_SE_oblique_VCRIS

African American Schools in Virginia: A Multiple Property Document (MPD) Project

POINT OF CONTACT

Related Press Releases

State Historical Marker to Be Dedicated for Polegreen Church “Dissenters’ Glebe” in Hanover County

9 New State Historical Highway Markers Approved

State Historical Marker Dedicated for Earliest-Known Black Sheriff in the North