This is a list of all remaining Confederate Monuments.  Click on the state to see the it’s monuments.  If anyone has more details or photos to add, Contact Us!

Alabama

Monument to Confederate Soldiers and Sailors

  • Location: Montgomery, AL
  • Construction Completed 1898
  • Removle STILL STANDING
  • Monument Design: Gorda Doud
  • Statue Sculptor: Alexander Doyle
  • Cost $20,000
    • $10,000 contributed by the Ladies Memorial Association of Alabama
    • $6,755 from the Historical and Monumental Association of Alabama
    • $5,000 from politicians.
Arizona
  • Arizona Confederate Veterans Monument in Greenwood Memory Lawn Cemetery in Phoenix, erected in 1999 by the Sons of Confederate Veterans
  • Arizona Confederate Veterans Monument in Wesley Bolen Park, next to the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix, erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy
  • Confederate Memorial in the Historical Soldiers Memorial Cemetery area of the Southern Arizona Veterans’ Cemetery in Sierra Vista. The monument was erected in 2010 to honor soldiers interred in that cemetery who served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War and later fought in Indian wars in Arizona as members of the U.S. Army.
Arkansas
Delaware
  • Delaware Confederate Monument, Georgetown, Delaware, unveiled in 2007[8]
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisiana
  • Caddo Parish Confederate Monument, on grounds of the Caddo Parish Court House, Shreveport, Louisiana, dedicated in 1906 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy – see listing at National Register of Historic Places
  • Orleans Parish – Robert E. Lee monument and circle – erected in 1884. 60 ft. column with 12 ft. statue on an earthen mound.
  • Orleans Parish – P. G. T. Beauregard equestrian monument – erected in 1913
  • Orleans Parish – President Jefferson Davis – erected in 1911
  • Orleans Parish – Liberty Place monument – erected 1891 to the battle for the attempted overthrow of the Carpetbag government put in place by the Federal Government in 1872. The battle occurred in 1874.
Maryland
  • Memorial to Confederate Soldiers – Baltimore, Maryland. Mount Royal Avenue.
  • Memorial to Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson – Baltimore, Maryland. In the western side of The Dell, Charles Village, near the Baltimore Museum of Art.
  • Rockville [Confederate] Civil War Monument – Rockville, Maryland. The monument sits on the side of the courthouse in downtown Rockville. The statue faces south. The pedestal reads “To our heroes of Montgomery Co Maryland. That we through life may not forget to love the thin gray line.” Date Installed or Dedicated: 01/01/1913
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
  • Confederate Memorial Fountain, Helena, Montana
North Carolina
  • Asheville, North Carolina
  • Chapel Hill: Silent Sam, 1913.
  • Concord: Confederate soldiers monument erected in 1892.
  • Durham, North Carolina: Durham County Courthouse, erected in 1924.
  • Forsyth County: Forsyth County Courthouse, in Winston-Salem.
  • Graham, North Carolina: features a monument in honor of Confederate Soldiers on the north side of the Alamance County Courthouse.
  • Louisburg: Tribute to, “Our Confederate Dead”. The monument is owned by the town of Louisburg, and in the center of Louisburg College.
  • Rocky Mount, North Carolina: Nash County Confederate Monument, erected in 1917 to honor Confederate War dead in Edgecombe and Nash Counties, rededicated to all veterans of all wars in 1976.
  • Oxford: Granville Gray, a Memorial to the Confederate Veterans of Granville County.
  • Raleigh: North Carolina State Confederate Monument, Union Square, also known as the Soldiers and Sailors Monument, on the State Capitol grounds.
  • Historic Oakwood Cemetery in Raleigh has a section devoted to Confederate soldiers’ graves, with a modest marker.
  • Salisbury: Confederate Monument erected in 1909.
  • Wilmington: Confederate Memorial
  • Winston-Salem, Forsythe County Courthouse.
  • Yanceyville: Caswell County Confederate Monument.
Ohio
  • Columbus, Camp Chase Cemetery Confederate Soldier Memorial
Pennsylvania
  • Gettysburg Battlefield is the site of several Confederate monuments erected between 1884 and 1982 to honor the dead of specific units or states
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
  • Amherst County Courthouse has a granite monument in front of courthouse.
  • Confederate Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia; authorized in 1906 by United States Secretary of War William Howard Taft and unveiled in 1914
  • Appomattox statue to the Confederate dead is at the intersection of Washington and Prince streets in Old Town Alexandria
  • Lynchburg has a Confederate Statue opposite Courthouse.
  • Mecklenburg County has a Confederate statue in front of the Courthouse.
  • Confederate Monument, Portsmouth, Virginia, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Portsmouth, Virginia
  • The Memorial Granite Pile, Confederate Section, Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia
  • Monument Avenue in Richmond features monuments of five Confederate leaders, in addition to African-American tennis player Arthur Ashe. His addition to the Confederate leaders was controversial.
  • Oakwood Cemetery in Richmond is the burial ground for enlisted men who died during Confederate service in the Richmond hospitals.
  • Southampton County has a statue next to the Courthouse’s parking lot.
  • Leesburg
West Virginia
Brazil
  • In 1865, at the end of the American Civil War, a substantial number of Southerners left the South; many moved to other parts of the United States, such as the American West, but a few left the country entirely. The most popular country of Southerners emigration was Brazil. These emigrants were known as Confederados. A Confederate monument was placed in Americana, São Paulo, Brazil.

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