Liberal Mayor Orders Crew to Dig Up Remains of Confederate General….

Dead bodies being dug up is a formula for disaster.

It’s a very impolite thing to do!

However, Democratic Mayor LeVar Stoney of Richmond, Virginia, still instructed a grounds crew to unearth Confederate General A.P. Hill’s decaying body.

Following the dismantling of A.P. Hill’s statue, a change was made.

Hill’s body was removed the following day because his statue was being used as a tombstone.

Even though Hill’s distant relatives tried to stop the removal of the skeletal remains, a Richmond Circuit Court judge decided in favor of doing so.

John Hill, a descendant of General A.P. Hill, was in attendance at the unburial to retrieve the remains.

Hill was heckled by several protestors.

“I’ll beat you like your daddy should’ve,” one person threatened.

WATCH:

The Bristol Herald Courier reported:

Removing the Hill monument proved especially challenging, since the general’s remains were buried underneath the dirt mound at the intersection of Hermitage Road and Laburnum Avenue.

After receiving the go-ahead from a Richmond Circuit Court judge, city officials moved swiftly to remove the Hill statue and relocate the gravesite underneath.

Morticians from Bennett Funeral Home helped escort Hill’s remains as they were dug up. The container holding his remains was wrapped by a small quilt and the Virginia flag before being ushered away.

Tuesday marks the third time the general’s body has been moved since his death in 1865 at the hands of a Union soldier in Petersburg.

The general was initially buried in a cemetery in Chesterfield County and later moved to a plot in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond. Hill’s remains were moved yet again in 1891 to Laburnum and Hermitage. When workers removed Hill’s body from Hollywood Cemetery, the wooden-oak coffin had fallen to pieces, according to an account in the Richmond Dispatch newspaper from the unveiling of his bronze statue in 1892.

Paul DiPasquale, a local sculptor, watched Tuesday as workers uncovered the skull, small bones and old cloth buried beneath molded stone under the monument.

“There was a statement that Hill was buried standing up, but as it turns out that wasn’t the case,” DiPasquale said.

While the statue will be moved to an undisclosed location with 11 other city-owned monuments, Hill’s remains were being moved to a gravesite in Culpeper, purchased by the City of Richmond for $1,000.

Eventually the monuments will be donated to the Black History Museum & Cultural Center of Virginia, according to city officials.

 

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