Just like that, it was gone. All that was left was an empty foundation where the remnants of the most divisive symbol in Chapel Hill had stood for a century. It had been removed without ceremony, by rope and crane and men in construction vests working in the dead of night, a mere six hours from announcement to disappearance.
Given Silent Samโs long, fraught history, it was almost anticlimactic.
After decades of complaints from students and faculty, after years of escalating protests culminating in the toppling of the Confederate statue in August, after months of handwringing from UNC officials about what to do nextโboth with Sam himself and with the monumentโs base, still in McCorkle Place, its plaques commemorating students who fought to preserve white supremacy in the โWar Between the Statesโโall it took was a moment of courage, or a flash of defiance, or simply having nothing left to lose, to finish a job begun by antiracism activists long ago.
On Monday afternoon, UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt informed the UNC Board of Governors during a closed meeting that she was resigning at the end of the semester. Nearly six years earlier, Folt had left Dartmouth to become UNCโs first female leader, taking over a school reeling from an academic fraud scandal. In Chapel Hill, she often found herself navigating the stateโs increasingly conservative and sometimes hostile political climate. But over the last two years, the turmoil surrounding Silent Sam had taken center stage and become a source of frustration.
She didnโt like the statue or what it stood forโwhat Ivy Leaguer would? Her students and faculty didnโt either. But her bossesโthe General Assembly and Board of Governorsโwanted it to stay. Folt was stuck.
But no more. Now she was free.
In announcing her departure, she flaunted that freedomโand also wrote the first line of her obituary: Not only was she leaving, she said, but she was removing Silent Samโs base on her way out.
โAs chancellor,โ she wrote, โthe safety of the UNC-Chapel Hill community is my clear, unequivocal and non-negotiable responsibility. The presence of the remaining parts of the monument on campus poses a continuing threat both to the personal safety and well-being of our community and to our ability to provide a stable, productive educational environment. No one learns at their best when they feel unsafe.โ
Following the deadly white-supremacist march in Charlottesville in August 2017 and the toppling of a Confederate monument in Durham a week later, pressure had mounted on Folt to do something about Sam. There were round-the-clock protests, counter-protests, arrests, white-supremacist rallies, police in riot gear deploying tear gas, an activist smearing blood on the statueโthe kind of tumult over which no university chancellor wants to preside.
Through it all, she seemed paralyzed, saying her hands were tied by a 2015 law that forbade moving so-called objects of remembrance. Even when Cooper offered her an outโa public-safety exemptionโshe declined, worried about antagonizing the General Assembly and Board of Governors.
Activists viewed her inaction as complicity. Last summer, they took matters into their own hands.
Folt dutifully called the August 20 downing of Silent Sam โunlawful and dangerous.โ But she also didnโt seem sad to see it go: โThe monument has been divisive for years, and its presence has been a source of frustration for many people not only on our campus, but throughout the community.โ
But that asinine state law was still there, and it still required Sam to be placed somewhere prominent. Folt didnโt want it to be McCorkle Place, UNCโs โfront door,โ so, along with the campusโs Board of Trustees, she pitched a $5 million โhistory and education centerโ to house it in โcontext.โ This pleased no one. The activists whoโd pulled Sam down called it a shrine; Confederate fetishists and conservative groups wanted the monument restored to its former glory; last month, the Board of Governors balked at the price tag, and ordered Folt to go back to the drawing board and report back in March.
This time, it was Folt who took matters into her own hands.
Caught unaware, the Board of Governors was enraged at her decision, which โundermines and insults the Boardโs goal to operate with class and dignity,โ chairman Harry Smith said in a statement Monday night. (Having angered the board, Folt announced Tuesday that sheโd be leaving in two weeks.)
By then, though, it was too late. The work crews were already on their way.
Foltโs move was legally questionable, according to UNC associate professor of public law and government Adam Lovelady, and the law seems to require its relocation to a prominent site. But itโs not clear who will expend the political capital to enforce that law. Cooper, who praised Folt, isnโt going to do it. Does the GOP really want to?
Itโs one thing to preserve an existing statue in the name of history. Itโs quite another to re-erect a Confederate monument, with all it symbolizes, in the year 2019. Is that the battle North Carolina Republicans want to take on heading into 2020, when theyโll share a ballot with Donald Trump?
Thereโs much to be said about Foltโs tenure at UNC. But at the end of the day, itโs quite likely sheโll have been the one to have forever banished Silent Sam from campus. And thatโs a hell of a way to go out.
Contact editor in chief Jeffrey Billman by phone at 919-286-1972, by email at [email protected], or on Twitter: @indyweek.


She didnโt exactly take the law into her own hands. She BROKE the law.
Macron so obviously sees a full constitutional republic as Elysium.