Williamson County Residents Renew Effort To Rid County Seal Of Confederate Flag

Williamson County Residents Renew Effort To Rid County Seal Of Confederate Flag

Williamson County Residents Renew Effort To Rid County Seal Of Confederate Flag

Image Credit: Williamson County, TN (Franklin, Brentwood, Spring Hill, etc.) / Facebook & Williamson County Govt.

The Tennessee Conservative [By Paula Gomes] –

A group of Williamson County residents asked County Commissioners this week to draft a new resolution in a renewed effort to get rid of the Confederate flag in the county’s seal.

After a five year legal battle that ended when the General Assembly amended the Tennessee Heritage Protection Act to include county seals, the group is now asking for a waiver from the Tennessee Monuments and Memorial Commission to change the seal.

Those in Williamson County who want to see the flag gone say that it is aligned with white supremacy, and discrimination and is not representative of the county or how they want to be portrayed.

Cory Martin, a member of One WillCo, said that it was not about erasing history but rather about creating a better future that all in the county can be proud of.

The seal, adopted in 1968 and which includes the flag draped over a cannon, was at risk of removal after the Tennessee Historical Commission and a judge in Davidson County ruled that it could be taken off.

The Major Nathaniel Cheairs Camp 2138 Sons of Confederate Veterans filed suit against both the county and the Tennessee Historical Commission to keep the seal as is.


The lawsuit said that the commission and the county had followed an unlawful procedure in seeking an official declaration that the seal was not a historic monument and therefore not subject to Tennessee’s historic preservation law. The law does not favor monuments and markers of Tennessee history to be altered or removed.

According to legal arguments on behalf of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, the county had first begun the process of petitioning the commission for permission to alter the seal, an admission by the county that they believed the seal was indeed subject to the state’s law. 

The law in question, which lawmakers subsequently made changes to, the Tennessee Heritage Protection Act, requires that historic monuments be preserved and protected, but extends that protection to public statues, as well as works of art, and street names.

The Confederate flag appears in the upper left quadrant of the Williamson County seal along with the cannon. Depicted in the other three quadrants are a Bible in front of a window belonging to a church, animals in a pasture, and a school house. 

About the Author: Paula Gomes is a Tennessee resident and reporter for The Tennessee Conservative. You can reach Paula at paula@tennesseeconservativenews.com.

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3 Responses

  1. WHAT A SHAME and they need to look into who those members were FROM, we are getting a lot of out of state LIBERALS moving in. THEY are not happy with trashing there states, so they move here and start the same crap.

  2. My ancestors were Tennessee Volunteers who marched with Andrew Jackson and company to the battle of Horseshoe Bend to defeat Red Stick and his murdering band (they massacred over 100 men, women, and children at Fort Mims, calling for a national response). Their sons and grandsons fought on the Confederate side with the Army of Northern Virginia. Two of them were killed at the Battle of the Wilderness. While I don’t often talk about our family’s heritage, since most who hear would consider it bragging, I see no reason to be ashamed of it and plenty of reasons to be proud of it. I mention it here and now because it is offensive to me to try to erase anyone’s brave contribution to our country’s history, be it North or South. Those who try are too often haters of America and America’s heritage these days. A goal of communism and all totalitarianism has always been to attempt to obliterate the heritage of the country they want to destroy. Our schools are doing much already in this area without politicians falling in line with the growing numbers of radicals who have nothing better to do apparently than move into Red states like Tennessee and turn it blue. Williamson County should have greater wisdom than to allow themselves to be bullied by those who are not from Tennessee, who have moved here after ruining their previous state(s), to try to continue the process here.

    A cannon with a Confederate flag draped across, representing only 1/4th of the county seal, should be no more offensive than the old-fashioned schoolhouse, the stained glass church window and Bible, and the depiction of Tennessee livestock. Each represents a part of Tennessee history. None are there to degrade or insult anyone, but to cause recollection of Tennessee’s justly proud heritage. Those who object do not have Tennessee’s or Tennessee’s people’s interests at heart, but are operating under a mask of hate for all things Tennessee, and in the case of the Confederate flag, for all things Southern.

    I will continue to be proud of my Southern heritage, just as others from other parts of the country are proud of theirs.

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