Fate of controversial slave trader statue revealed

A commission has found Bristolians want the recently torn-down statue of slave trader Edward Colston to be permanently housed in a museum Read Full Article at RT.com

Fate of controversial slave trader statue revealed

The We Are Bristol History Commission has concluded that the statue of Edward Colston should be put on display

An independent citywide consultation into the future of the recently toppled statue of Bristol slave trader Edward Colston has concluded it should be housed in a museum.

The recommendation presented by the We Are Bristol History Commission is that the statue is permanently displayed horizontally and still covered with paint, preserving the damaged state it was in when it was retrieved from the harbor into which it was dumped.

80% of Bristolians surveyed stated that the statue should go on display. Of the one in five individuals who did not want the statue to be displayed, half of that group wanted it to be returned to the plinth, while a quarter of those individuals thought it should be destroyed.

Read more
Sage Willoughby, Jake Skuse, Milo Ponsford and Rhian Graham celebrate after receiving a not guilty verdict at Bristol Crown Court, on January 05, 2022 in Bristol, England. © Getty Images / Finnbarr Webster
The ‘Colston Four’ verdict is a licence for woke vandalism

The report stated that the plinth which previously housed the statue should be used to display temporary pieces or activities that reflect issues that are important for Bristolians, including the history and impact of the slave trade. It should also remain empty at times to remind people passing by of what happened to the statue.

During the 17th century, Colston was a shareholder in the Royal African Company, which shipped 84,000 Africans – including 12,000 children – into slavery.

The Colston statue was torn down by Black Lives Matter protesters in 2020 before it was thrown into the Bristol harbor in opposition to his role as a slave trader.

Four activists who were responsible for ripping the statue off its plinth were cleared of criminal wrongdoing in January after urging jurors to “be on the right side of history.”