The memorial was removed between 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. Wednesday. It was taken to a storage site, but the grave markers remain in place.
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The stone structure had been vandalized, and the group that owns the monument, the Long Beach chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, wanted it to be moved before any serious damage was done.
"The situation has become somewhat untenable. It was no longer possible for us to make an atmosphere of serenity and harmony and inclusion," said Theodore Hovey, a cemetery spokesman. "The owners of the monument decided that it was best to remove the monument."
Not many people knew about the monument until the Los Angeles Times published an op-ed, sparking the massive call for its removal. All across the country, the call to remove Confederate statues and monuments has grown.
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Hollywood Forever Cemetery admits that removing the monument may not end the controversy. Some alt-right groups have already threatened to protest the removal of the memorial. Meantime, others are worried about what precedent it sets to take it out.
"If we start asking to remove these monuments, then they're going to start removing monuments of Martin Luther King," said Monique Edwards, a Hollywood resident. "So we don't want to go through that battle. Just leave it as is. We just don't like the violence."
The United Daughters of the Confederacy told Eyewitness News that there are no plans to put that memorial back on display.
The memorial has been at the cemetery since 1925. More than 30 confederate veterans and their families are buried at the site.