NC protesters topple Confederate statue outside courthouse

Monday, August 14, 2017
DURHAM, N.C. -- Protesters in Durham, North Carolina rushed and toppled a Confederate statue outside the courthouse on Monday evening.

The monument of a Confederate soldier holding a rifle was erected in 1924 and inscribed on it are the words "in memory of the boys who wore the gray."






The crowd was initially small but steadily grew to include more than 100 people.

Durham protesters march downtown


As the crowd became more animated, several protesters approached the monument and threw some sort of nylon rope around it, eventually pulling the statue of the soldier to the ground.

Protesters storm and tear down the Confederate monument.

Jonah Kaplan



After the statue fell, many of the protesters kicked and stomped it.



Protesters then moved on to walk down to Roxboro Street at Main Street, where they blocked the intersection. The protesters later marched to the site of the new Durham Police headquarters, which is under construction.

Durham Police remained close by but kept their distance from the protesters.
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