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Confederate Monument in Danville
Confederate Monument in Danville.jpg
Confederate Monument in Danville is located in Kentucky
Confederate Monument in Danville
Location in Kentucky
Confederate Monument in Danville is located in the United States
Confederate Monument in Danville
Location in the United States
Location Danville, Kentucky
Built 1910
MPS Civil War Monuments of Kentucky MPS
NRHP reference No. 97000720
Added to NRHP July 17, 1997

The Confederate Monument in Danville is a special statue located in Danville, Kentucky. It stands between Centre College and the Presbyterian Church. This monument honors soldiers who fought for the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.

The monument was built in 1910. It was dedicated by Civil War veterans from Boyle County, Kentucky. The Kate Morrison Breckinridge Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy also helped.

About the Danville Confederate Monument

The monument has two main parts. There is a tall granite base, which is like a strong stand. On top of this base is a white marble statue. The statue shows Captain Robert D. Logan. He was a soldier from the Civil War.

The granite base is twelve feet tall. It has decorative columns called Doric columns. A main message is carved into the base. It says: C. S. A. 1861 - 1865 What They Were the Whole World Knows.

Who Was Captain Logan?

Captain Robert D. Logan was a real person. He was from Lincoln County, Kentucky. After the war, he lived in Boyle County. Captain Logan served in the 6th Kentucky Cavalry. He was part of Company A, led by John Hunt Morgan.

Captain Logan was captured during Morgan's Raid in Cheshire, Ohio. This happened on July 20, 1863. He spent much of the rest of the war in prison camps. One of these was the Ohio State Penitentiary. Captain Logan passed away on June 25, 1896. This was fourteen years before the monument was built.

Danville During the Civil War

Danville did not see much fighting during the Civil War. However, it played a role in other ways. After the Battle of Perryville, the courthouse and some buildings at Centre College became hospitals. They helped treat injured Union soldiers.

On October 11, 1862, Confederate forces moved through Danville. Union forces were following close behind them. Danville was also the hometown of Theodore O'Hara. He wrote a famous poem called Bivouac of the Dead. This poem was often placed in cemeteries for soldiers who died in the war.

A Place for Soldiers: Cemeteries

After the Civil War, people in Danville created a special cemetery. In 1868, they set aside parts of Bellevue Cemetery. This became a burial place for Confederate soldiers. Sixty-six fallen Confederate soldiers were reburied there.

This Confederate cemetery is next to the Danville National Cemetery. The National Cemetery was created in 1862. It was set aside for Union troops.

In 2019, the leaders of The Presbyterian Church of Danville voted. They decided to move the monument from the church grounds. They asked the City of Danville for permission. They wanted to move the monument to Bellevue Cemetery.

Recognized as Important: National Register

On July 17, 1997, the Confederate Monument in Danville was added to the National Register of Historic Places. This list includes important historical sites. It was one of sixty monuments in Kentucky related to the Civil War to be added at that time.

Three other monuments in Boyle County are also on this list. All of them remember the Battle of Perryville. These include the Confederate Monument in Perryville and Union Monument in Perryville. Both are near the visitor center at Perryville Battlefield State Historic Site. The Unknown Confederate Dead Monument in Perryville is in a private cemetery nearby.

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