In the following there is the certified mail postcard, the letter, and then supplemental materials that were sent with the letter.
Click on images to see the entire image.
Mayor
Mike Rawlings
Mayor and
City Council City of Dallas
1500
Marilla St.
Dallas,
TX 75201
Dear Hon.
Rawlings:
The Task
Force on Confederate monuments had this resolution regarding Fair Park.
2.
Recognizing that Fair Park is a local, state, and national landmark, the Task
Force recommends that the historic art and architecture of Fair Park which
contains symbols of, or references to, the Confederate States of America or
persons associated therewith, remain in place as a piece of the history of
Texas as presented at Fair Park. However the Task Force recommends that
appropriate signage, markers, digital tour guides, public art, educational
programming, and/or exhibitions be added as necessary to provide the full
context of the Civil War, Reconstruction, “Lost Cause” mythology, the “Jim
Crow” era, and the creation of Fair Park for the 1936 Texas Centennial.
Historical context should include reference to the many contributions of
Mexicans, Tejanos and indigenous peoples made during the colonization of Texas,
the Texas Revolution, and during and after the Mexican War leading to the 20th
Century, to also include the participation or exclusion of various communities
in those historic events.
First, I
would like to point out is that the Cultural Affairs Committee, in their meeting
Oct. 12, 2017 were informed of this recommendation, but didn’t vote on it. Is
the public to assume that this recommendation of the Task Force on Confederate
Monuments has been dropped?
I further
would like to review this recommendation. I think it misses the point of Fair
Park and the Hall of State which is the representation of a triumphal account
of Texas history resulting in the white supremacist state of Texas in 1936.
Though not fascistic in its art forms, it is veritably a “Triumph of the Texas
Will,” in the art and architecture. The
entire built environment is a message of white supremacy. Leni Riefenstahl
would have recognized what Fair Park was about.
The six
flags of Texas theme is fundamentally an expression of white supremacy. History
in Texas doesn’t start until there are white people present.
In
reviewing the murals along the Esplanade in the buildings you see white people
as masters of science, technology, crafts, trades, and industry. Nowhere are
non-white people present. White people do everything under the patronage of
white goddesses in front of the buildings. A flyer is enclosed with illustrations of this
point.
In the
Hall of State white people found and build states and societies, African
Americans tote bales of hay. Possibly an African American is shown helping to
saw down a tree.
The story
of Texas to 1936 is the dispossession of Native Americans of the land, the establishment
of a society built by the exploitation
of African slaves, the separation from a multi-racial abolitionist Mexico to
establish a white supremacist slave Republic with Hispanics and of course slaves
making non-white underclasses, then a panicked attempted secession from a
United States that was headed towards abolition, then a violent terroristic
overthrow of efforts to establish a multi-racial democracy during
Reconstruction and then the establishment of a white supremacist Jim Crow
Texas.
The
omission of Reconstruction from the murals at the Hall of State at Fair Park is
the first obvious indicator to look at that these beautiful murals and statues
as propaganda and not just pretty things.
The art
objects and murals serve to make the, previously mentioned history of Texas,
the continuing struggle of a white supremacist society and its triumph in the
Jim Crow era in the establishment of a white supremacist state a glorious and
beautiful accomplishment of white people. The crushing of non-white humanity is
missing. The art defines racial roles in society as given in the opposite page
of this flyer.
The
literature of the Centennial repeatedly refers to the establishment of an
empire, situating the triumph of Texas as the formation of an empire in a world
imperial system of white supremacy of European and American empires. The
souvenir program for the Cavalcade of
Texas performed at the Centennial also portrays Texas history as a triumph
in establishing what it calls an “empire.”
Cullen F.
Thomas, president of the Texas Centennial Commission, the booklet
“Commemorating A Hundred Years of Texas History,” makes the racial meaning of
“empire” clear when he states about the Centennial, “It will testify that
Texans are not unworthy of the incomparable heritage left to them by martyrs
and patriots, dying and ready to die, that Texas might become an Anglo-Saxon
commonwealth,” establishing that Texas is not just a white triumph, but a
triumph of a certain type of white people. The Dallas
Morning News, “750,000 Expected to Attend Centennial during Week,” June I,
1936, pages 1,9, reported that D.W. Griffith, director of the pro-Klan movie,
“Birth of a Nation,” both reviewed and improved the Cavalcade to let the public know that Griffith endorsed it.
The Task
Force on Confederate monuments recommendation doesn’t see that the entire built
environment of Fair Park is in the service of white supremacy, but instead the
Task Force sees a something that just needs some corrections and modifications
which will likely be implemented as token gestures. Given the current historical context provided
at Fair Park by the Dallas Historical Society I would say they are unqualified
to do any contextualization.
I enclose
a flyer with some of the Confederate art work to be found at Fair Park. The
statue of the Confederacy is particularly insidious because it represents the
Confederacy, an attempt to establish a state to preserve slavery and white
supremacy, as a thing of heavenly beauty, a white goddess.
The Texas
medallion at the hall of state again has all the stages of Texas represented by
white women on clouds even though Texas has been a place of multiple
nationalities and races. The Confederacy is represented as beautiful, heavenly
and bountiful. The medallion as a whole represents this succession establishing
white supremacy as the essential core identity of Texas.
The State
Fairs at Fair Park have had a Confederate Day each year from sometime in the
1880’s until sometime in the 1990s. On these days neo-Confederate groups have
had presentations advancing their ideology.
The fact
that Fair Park is given local, state and national landmark status is no excuse
to uncritically accept a white supremacist built environment. They might merit
these landmark status, but they should merit this as an example of a 1930s
white supremacist built environment showing another example in that era of
fascism a different way of supporting white supremacy.
The city
of Dallas should recognize Fair Park for what it is and act accordingly.
Sincerely
Yours,
Edward
H. Sebesta
CC:
Office
|
Name
|
Address
|
Address
|
Mayor Pro Tem
|
Dwaine Caraway
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
Deputy Mayor Pro Tem
|
Adam Medrano
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 1 Council Member
|
Scott Griggs
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 3 Council Member
|
Casey Thomas II
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 5 Council Member
|
Rickey D. Callahan
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 6 Council Member
|
Omar Narvaez
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 7 Council Member
|
Kevin Felder
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 8 Council Member
|
Tennell Atkins
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 9 Council Member
|
Mark Clayton
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 10 Council Member
|
B. Adam McGough
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 11 Council Member
|
Lee Kleinman
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 12 Council Member
|
Sandy Greyson
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 13 Council Member
|
Jennifer Staubach Gates
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
District 14 Council Member
|
Philip T. Kingston
|
Mayor and City Council
|
Dallas City Hall
|
FIRST SUPPLEMENTAL DOCUMENT.
I had to break up the WORD document into image files. This is the two-sided flyer I handed out.
These two images were page 1 of the flyer.
Page 2 of the flyer.
I am going to have the text first and then an image of the final part.
Summary
Review of Fair Park as in White Park
The
story of Texas to 1936 is the dispossession of Native Americans of the land,
the establishment of a society built the
exploitation of African slaves, the separation from a multi-racial abolitionist
Mexico to establish a white supremacist slave Republic with Hispanics and of
course slaves making non-white underclasses, then a panicked attempted
secession from a United States that was headed towards abolition, then a
violent terroristic overthrow of efforts to establish a multi-racial democracy
during Reconstruction and then the establishment of a white supremacist Jim
Crow Texas.
The
omission of Reconstruction from the murals at the Hall of State at Fair Park is
the first obvious indicator to look at that these beautiful murals and statues
as propaganda and not just pretty.
The
art objects and murals serve to make the, previously mentioned history of
Texas, the continuing struggle of a white supremacist society and its triumph
in the Jim Crow era in the establishment of a white supremacist state a glorious
and beautiful accomplishment of white people. The crushing of non-white
humanity is missing. The art defines racial roles in society as given in the
opposite page of this flyer.
The
Cavalcade of Texas which was
performed every evening during the Centennial in 1936 also portrayed Texas
history as a triumph in the establishment of what one Texas Centennial
Commission booklet describe as an “Anglo-Saxon empire,” not only defining a
racial triumph but excluding whites who were not Anglo-Saxon and positioning
Texas as part of the world imperial system of white supremacy.
It
should not be surprising that D.W. Griffith, who directed the notorious
pro-Klan movie, Birth of a Nation,
was involved in its production.
Fair
Parks art powerfully endorsed and encouraged neo-Confederates meeting there in
the past and is a continuing text to teach a white nationalist history in the
present.
Fair
Park is a project of a white supremacist state in the interwar era, it isn’t
fascist, but a comparison of similar tactics with fascist and totalitarian art
and architecture is warranted. To consider Fair Park as just an object of the
decorative arts is banal white nationalism and collusion with its agenda. To only consider the Confederate art work is
to be oblivious.
SECOND SUPPLEMENTAL DOCUMENT
Just because the same images are shown here doesn't mean that the accompanying text is the same. Additional issues are discussed.
Page 1
Page 2
This page is going to be a text and an image. Click on the image to see the figures on the right. I am not finished analyzing the image. I think these three women are supposed to represent the Fates from Greek mythology and one of the goddesses is the Confederacy which is conflated as the South. The following is the text for the image on page 2 of this supplement.
This art
work touches upon the Confederacy in two ways. In the image below on the left
there is the Confederate army with the Confederate battle flag are heroically
portrayed.
The three
female figures to the right however have multiple neo-Confederate themes. 1)
The Confederacy and the South are represented as identical even though half as
many men from the South were in the American army as in the Confederate
army. 2) This is a “war between the states”
idea since the middle figure is Columbia, a figure representing the United
States, as a separate figure from the North and South figures which represent
warring factions instead of the Civil War being a Confederacy attempting to
secede from the American nation. 3) Slavery, the cause of the Civil War, is
nowhere to be seen in this representation of the Civil War.
Page 3
Notice the clouds on which the figures rest. The Confederacy is a being in heaven and hence heavenly.
Page 4
This is an image of omissions and making the Confederacy as integral to Texas identity.
I am still analyzing Fair Park and doing research. I am still purchasing artifacts. What is really interesting is how the art establishment of Dallas refuses to see what Fair Park is and what the art work is about. Instead they just sort of babble pretty pretty. That is the perniciousness of Fair Park making white supremacy as beautiful.
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