Baltimore's Monuments to the Confederacy removed from OpenStreetMap after their removal by the City of Baltimore
Postiwyd gan ElliottPlack ar 16 Awst 2017 yn EnglishThe Mayor and City Council of Baltimore acted swiftly after violence at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va. led to a national conversation on the removal of Confederate monuments. The protests centered around the removal of prominent Confederate generals’ monuments in that city. In Baltimore, the City Council passed a bill that permitting the removal of four Baltimore monuments to the Confederacy. The mayor executed the order by contacting local firms to remove the four Confederate monuments in Baltimore during the night of August 15, 2017, into the following morning.
OpenStreetMap is a database of physical features. Since the four monuments are no longer physically present, I have removed them from OpenStreetMap. The removed statues include the Roger B. Taney Monument, the Lee-Jackson Monument, the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument, and the Confederate Women’s Monument.
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Sylwadau gan mikelmaron ar 18 Awst 2017 am 15:11
Amazing work @ElliotPlack
Sylwadau gan Arlo James Barnes ar 19 Medi 2018 am 02:01
My city is currently in the process of evaluating the cultural context of all monuments within the city limits. I think if any end up being removed I will find out where the objects ended up (municipal storage, for example) and move the nodes there, and slap a disused: in front of them.