
Published online:
21 May 2015
Published in print:
07 October 2014
Online ISBN:
9780813050423
Print ISBN:
9780813049960
Contents
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Starke, 1968 Starke, 1968
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Jacksonville Evergreen Cemetery, 1973 Jacksonville Evergreen Cemetery, 1973
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Tampa Oaklawn Cemetery, 1975, 1996, And One Unknown Date Tampa Oaklawn Cemetery, 1975, 1996, And One Unknown Date
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Bartow, 1982 Bartow, 1982
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Fort Meade, 1983 Fort Meade, 1983
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Crawfordville, 1987 Crawfordville, 1987
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Olustee Battlefield, 1991 Olustee Battlefield, 1991
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Clearwater, 1993 Clearwater, 1993
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Chattahoochee, 1994 Chattahoochee, 1994
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Madison, 1996 Madison, 1996
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Fort Myers, 1998 Fort Myers, 1998
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Havana, 1999 Havana, 1999
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St. Cloud, 2000 St. Cloud, 2000
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Jacksonville, 2001 Jacksonville, 2001
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White Springs, 2002 White Springs, 2002
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Kissimmee, 2002 Kissimmee, 2002
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Alachua, 2002 Alachua, 2002
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Sebastian,2004 Sebastian,2004
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Dade City, 2006 Dade City, 2006
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St. Cloud, 2006 St. Cloud, 2006
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Lakeland, 2007 Lakeland, 2007
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Oxford,2007 Oxford,2007
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Perry, 2007 Perry, 2007
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Marianna, 2007 Marianna, 2007
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Old Town, 2007 Old Town, 2007
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Plant City, 2007 Plant City, 2007
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Tullahoma, Tennessee, 2008 Tullahoma, Tennessee, 2008
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Tampa, 2008 Tampa, 2008
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Trenton, 2010 Trenton, 2010
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Green Cove Springs, 2011 Green Cove Springs, 2011
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Ormond Beach, 2011 Ormond Beach, 2011
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Chapter
5 Monuments Erected After The Civil War Centennial
Get access-
Published:October 2014
Cite
Lees, William B., and Frederick P. Gaske, 'Monuments Erected After The Civil War Centennial', Recalling Deeds Immortal: Florida Monuments to the Civil War (Gainesville, FL , 2014; online edn, Florida Scholarship Online, 21 May 2015), https://doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813049960.003.0005, accessed 26 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
Although the golden era of Civil War monument construction preceded the Civil War Centennial, monuments have continued to be placed in the Florida and other state landscapes at a relatively steady pace. Confederate monuments still predominate, and, for these, the Sons of Confederate Veterans has joined the United Daughters of the Confederacy as an important sponsor. This chapter foregrounds a number of significant monuments honoring both Union and Confederate themes as well as other monuments, some erected by new heritage organizations, that differ in character and purpose from those erected prior to the Centennial.
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