Council debates Charters for Freedom
Published 8:53 pm Sunday, May 21, 2017
City officials are expected to discuss a proposal to locate a Charters of Freedom display in Washington, according to the tentative agenda for the City Council’s meeting today.
The agenda provided no details about the proposed discussion, but the council has talked about the proposal before. The agenda also includes discussion about Washington’s historical figures, but provided no details.
During the City Council’s Feb. 27 meeting, Mayor Mac Hodges said he met with Beaufort County Commissioner Gary Brinn, Ron Lewis and others interested the project to discuss its details. The monument would include replicas of the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Lewis, a retired Marine Corps 1st lieutenant and member of Foundation Forward, a private nonprofit, proposed building the monument at a Beaufort County Board of Commissioners meeting earlier this year.
“It takes a space 10 feet deep by 18 feet wide. There’s four pages of the Constitution in the center. … Then the Declaration and the Bill of Rights on each side as a standalone unit,” Mayor Mac Hodges told the council earlier this year. The proposed site for the monument is at the end of Respess Street, where there are flagpoles and two other monuments.
“But we are agreed that it’s going to go on the waterfront down where the other monuments are?” asked Councilman Doug Mercer.
“That’s where he (Lewis) wanted to put it,” Hodges said.
The waterfront site is best because more people visit the waterfront than some of the other sites considered, such as Havens Gardens or Veterans Memorial Park, Hodges said.
“They raise their own money so we’re (the city) not looking at any money. We’re just looking to see if council is OK … we’ll put right behind those two (existing monuments). I think that would be a great place to put it,” Hodges said.
Foundation Forward seeks donations from civic organizations, businesses and other sources to raise money for monuments, he added.
City Manager Bobby Roberson reminded the council the proposed site is inside the city’s historic district “and we have to let them (Historic Preservation Commission) buy into it. There might be some other individuals, when it comes to the waterfront, with difference of opinion.”
Roberson suggested the city conduct a public hearing on the proposed project to get input from city residents and others. That has not happened.
At his meeting with the Beaufort County Board of Commissioners several months ago, Lewis said the purpose behind the monuments is educational: rather than school-aged children traveling to Washington, D.C., to see the documents, the 3,143 local governments across the U.S. should have access to them at home.