
by Charly Mann
In 1909 the United Daughters of the Confederacy decided to have a monument built on the UNC campus to honor Carolina students who had fought for the South in the Civil War.
Silent Sam was unveiled and dedicated on June 2, 1913, and stands in McCorkle Place near Franklin Street facing directly north.
For the last quarter century many people have felt that Silent Sam dishonors the University because it memorializes a cause that supported slavery. For those of you who feel this way I have some comforting news. Silent Sam is a Yankee who was modeled on a Boston policeman named Harold V Langlois. The sculptor who created him, John Wilson, was even more of a Northerner -- from Canada. Finally, Sam is not very threatening, since he carries no ammunition.
I think of Sam as a tribute to the 321 former students of the University who died in the Civil War. To put that in some perspective, this would have been more than half the University's enrollment prior to the Civil War, and would be like losing more than 15,000 students in a war today. Slavery is morally wrong, but the North also had slaves during much of the Civil War, and we still honor their dead. Many of these Carolina men thought they were fighting as much for their families and states as anything else. When I examine the writing of students during that period, I rarely come across any correspondence that even mentions slavery as something they are fighting to defend.

What is it that binds us to this place as to no other? It is not the well or the bell or the stone walls. or the crisp October nights. No, our love for this place is based upon the fact that it is as it was meant to be, The University of the People.



please let that chapel hill liberalism go....silent sam was not a yankee was not meant to be a yankee and isn t a yankee g wayne pressley class of 1974