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California’s Third Most Populous City Taking Down Statue of Man Who Claimed City for the United States. Are They Saying the City Shouldn’t Be Part of the United States?

By Allan Wall

04/20/2023

Some who support the removal of Confederate statues say the Confederates were traitors and/or losers.

But now in San Jose, California, they are taking down the statue of a man who fought for the United States, on the winning side.

From San Jose Spotlight:

After two years, work has finally started on removing a controversial San Jose monument. On Tuesday [April 18], construction workers started jackhammering the three-foot concrete pedestal of the Thomas Fallon statue, crumbling concrete and sending dust flying. The statue, located at the intersection of St. James and Julian streets, has caused public uproar for more than three decades.

[San Jose Fallon statue is heading to storage, by Lorraine Gabbert, San Jose Spotlight, April 20, 2023]

San Jose, by the way, is in the Bay Area and is the third most populous city in California.

Carlos Velazquez, spokesperson for the San Jose Office of Economic Development and Cultural Affairs, said his office is honoring its commitment to remove the statue by May 4, barring any further weather delays. “We’re following through with the community’s desires,” he told San José Spotlight.

So why are they taking it down?

Commissioned in 1988 by former Mayor Tom McEnery, the statue of Fallon on horseback — raising the American flag in San Jose after Congress declared war on Mexico in 1846 — has been considered condescending to Indigenous and Latino communities.

California is part of the United States as a result of the Mexican War, fought from 1846 to 1848. For more information, see my article on the topic: On Guadalupe Hidalgo Day, Here’s Why The U.S. Has Title To The Southwest.

So what are these people saying — that California should not be part of the United States?

Charlene Nijmeh, tribal chairwoman of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe, said it’s fantastic to see the city take action.

“They heard our voices,” she told San José Spotlight. “It’s been a 30-year struggle. This is Genocide Awareness and Prevention Month. What that statue represents is the genocide that happened here. We were the people that were impacted. We’re getting justice.”

Nijmeh would like to see artwork representing marginalized communities in place of the Fallon statue. The statue will go into storage — Velazquez said the focus is on removing it and replacing the traffic median, as there isn’t funding available for new artwork.

The Ohlone people were living in the region when the Spaniards arrived. That means they were colonized by the Spaniards, after which the territory was briefly part of Mexico and after that were living in U.S. territory.

Has Charlene Nijmeh, chairwoman of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe, thought through all this?

Is she saying the Ohlone shouldn’t be under U.S. jurisdiction? Would she prefer they be under Mexican or Spanish jurisdiction? Or none of the above?

In that case, would they return to living in this type of traditional Ohlone hut? Would they dress like their ancestors? Would they only eat what their ancestors ate?

Just asking, because once you go down that route, these questions arise.

Long seen as a symbol of colonial oppression, the statue was vandalized in 2020 following protests in the wake of George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police.

"Colonial oppression"? Are they saying San Jose shouldn’t be part of the United States?

In July 2020, protesters marched from Fallon’s historic home to the statue. Later, the bronze sculpture was painted red, representing the blood on Fallon’s hands. Signs taped to it said, “Honor Native Peoples. Take it down” and “Genocide is nothing to celebrate.” In September 2020, an American flag atop the statue was set ablaze.

Did you catch that part? An American flag was set on fire.

Following public protests, Mayor Sam Liccardo held town halls to discuss the statue’s fate. In February 2021, the mayor called for the statue’s removal and said it symbolized the white conquest of Mexican and Indigenous communities.

Once again, are these people saying San Jose shouldn’t be part of the United States? Should it be part of Mexico? The Spanish Empire? Should the Ohlone Indians be independent? Are there other tribes with a claim to the land?

“For the third time in three decades, debate over the Thomas Fallon Statue has reopened old wounds and deepened divides,” Liccardo wrote in a blog post explaining his decision. “It’s time to move on.”

In November 2021, the San Jose City Council voted unanimously to remove the 16-foot-tall, 12,000-pound bronze sculpture. Although this was expected to be completed in August 2022, weather issues contributed to delays, Velazquez said.

The decision was unanimous. Not one member of the council defended keeping the statue up.

The removal costs about $450,000, Velazquez said, including barricades, shutting down a lane of traffic, jackhammering the foundation, lifting the statue with a crane, building two stabilizing steel transportable foundations with crates, transporting it to storage, cleanup and demolition.

“It’s the right thing to do,” Velazquez said. “The statue is seen as a symbol of racism and is unwelcoming to many members of our community. We want all residents to feel that they matter and belong.”

How about patriotic Americans? Do they matter and belong in San Jose anymore?

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