
Bill Stephens, CEO of the Stone Mountain Memorial Association, which is in the planning phase of building a monument to Martin Lu ther King Jr. on the summit of the granite rock. Brant Sanderlin, bsanderlin@ajc.com
On the summit of Stone Mountain, yards away from where Ku Klux Klansmen once burned giant crosses, just above and beyond the behemoth carving of three Confederate heroes, state authorities have agreed to erect a monument to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Specifically, an elevated tower — featuring a replica of the Liberty Bell — would celebrate the single line in the civil rights martyr’s 1963 “I Have a Dream” speech that makes reference to the 825-foot-tall hunk of granite: “Let freedom ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia.”
“It is one of the best-known speeches in U.S. history,” said Bill Stephens, the chief executive officer of the Stone Mountain Memorial Association. “We think it’s a great addition to the historical offerings we have here.”
The “freedom bell” will, in fact, sound from the mountaintop. How often, or when, hasn’t been determined.
Also in the works at the state-owned, privately operated park: a permanent exhibit on African-American soldiers in the Civil War.
Both the monument and the exhibit would be financed with park revenue — chiefly parking and entrance fees. No appropriation from the state Legislature would be required. Full funding sources, project scope and budget are yet to be determined. The park is operated by Silver Dollar City-Stone Mountain Park, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Georgia firm Herschend Family Entertainment.
Gov. Nathan Deal has green-lighted the projects, and a formal rollout is likely to come before the holiday season. (A Deal initiative to place an MLK statue on the grounds of the state Capitol remains in the works, delayed by the death of the sculptor originally chosen for the job.)
“I’ve gotten the appropriate buy-in from the powers that be,” Stephens said. That includes several prominent African-Americans — though he isn’t yet prepared to say who.
Because King’s 1963 speech is copyrighted, permission of King’s heirs will be required. “Discussions have taken place with the King family and are taking place now,” Stephens said. “Their initial reaction is very favorable. But we haven’t completed those discussions yet.”

The bare granite surface where an MLK monument is intended on the summit of Stone Mountain. bsanderlin@ajc.com
Both the monument and exhibit are answers to a renewed debate over government-sponsored Confederate displays in the South, sparked by this summer’s massacre of nine black churchgoers in Charleston, S.C.
In the aftermath of the killings, demands that the Rebel symbols be removed from the park, one of Georgia’s most popular tourist attractions, were met with counter-demonstrations by flag-waving Confederate enthusiasts.
But behind the racially charged argument was this point from critics that struck home: As a three-dimensional history lesson, Stone Mountain has pushed a one-sided view of America’s bloodiest conflict — one that hasn’t changed much since the 1960s and ignores its impact on nearly half of this state’s Civil War population. That is, the portion that was in chains.
It’s a cultural needle that requires careful threading.
By state law, Stone Mountain serves as a memorial to the Confederacy and its fight to preserve slavery in America. And so the Rebel battle flag will continue to fly near Confederate Hall. Street names such as Jefferson Davis Drive and Robert E. Lee Boulevard won’t be touched. Suggestions that the 3-acre carving of Davis, Lee and Stonewall Jackson be sandblasted off the side of the mountain have been rejected out of hand.
“We’re into additions and not subtractions,” Stephens said.
But while Stone Mountain will continue to serve as a Confederate touchstone for many white Southerners, it must do so as a profit-making entity within a local community that has become predominantly African-American. This summer, state Rep. LaDawn Jones, D-Atlanta, called for a boycott of the park over the Confederate battle flag issue.
It failed, in large part because Stone Mountain is such a valued recreation asset for the largely black neighborhoods that surround the park. In that sense, an MLK monument atop the mountain is simply an acknowledgement that history requires willing consumers and a context that includes their view of the world.
This particular corner of the South has become a place where a Confederacy in isolation is no longer commercially viable.
There is some irony in the fact that Stephens, a former state senator from North Georgia, has overseen this addition to Stone Mountain symbolism. During the 1990s, he was the press secretary for Gov. Zell Miller. It was Miller who, in a failed bid to remove the Confederate battle emblem from the state flag, complained that Georgia put too much stock in a certain four years in the middle of the 19th century.
Stephens said the idea of an MLK monument at Stone Mountain has been percolating for several years. Two years ago, a group of DeKalb County residents walked to the summit for an Aug. 28 bell-ringing to mark the 50th anniversary of the “I Have a Dream” speech, delivered from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the massive March on Washington.
“That started conversation,” Stephens said. But it progressed only in fits and starts.
The head of the Stone Mountain Memorial Association was kind enough to cite an Insider column in July as another conversation-starter. “That was a signal we were on the right track,” Stephens said. “But it’s been a while in the making. It’s time for additions to the park.”
Stephens hopes to have the monument in place by next summer. Standing in front of the carving on Stone Mountain’s northern face, park visitors on the ground won’t be able to see the MLK marker, which will be dominated by an arch 18 feet tall.
But Stephens said the monument’s location on the summit has been selected with the Confederate carving — and bit of symbolic storytelling — in mind.
A cable-car ride now takes mountaintop visitors close to the massive work, brushing past the nose of Jeff Davis, the only president of the Southern rebellion. Next summer, as the car rises above the mountain’s curve, the next picture presented to the eye will be a monument to a man silenced by a rifle shot that, many would argue, was fired in the same war — just 103 years later.
Though small by comparison, the MLK marker would serve as a somber bookend to the Confederate narrative.
Perhaps just as important, the monument would be a fitting answer to those old KKK connections to Stone Mountain. In the early 1900s, the push for a carving on the mountain and the re-emergence of the Klan in Georgia went hand-in-hand, according to the most extensive history of Stone Mountain, a 1997 book by David Freeman titled “Carved in Stone.” At the time, some suggested that Klansmen be represented in the carving — along with Confederate soldiery.
There was a reason King included Stone Mountain in that 1963 speech. Klan rallies at the summit had been banned only five years earlier, with the state’s 1958 purchase of the acreage.
Will this end the South’s argument over a shared and disputed heritage? Most assuredly not. When describing that exhibit for African-American soldiers in the Civil War, Stephens repeatedly stressed the phrase “on both sides.”
By the end of the war, nearly one in 10 Union soldiers was African-American — nearly 200,000 in all. Forty thousand died, and 16 received the Medal of Honor. Among historians, estimates of black soldiers fighting for the South range from a handful to a few hundred — although thousands of slaves were involved in the construction of defensive works across the Confederacy.
And so the discussion will continue, but on ground that will continue to shift. We give the last word to Harry Truman: “The only thing new in the world is the history you do not know.”







The only reason the racists and desecraters want to do this is just to spite confederates of past and those who still honor them. It is a racist act and if that was something blacks and whites who betray their own race wanted to do it would have been done years ago. It is retaliation only and no mlk should not be on stone mountain. It is just for spite. Grow up racists. There will always be racism and forget about that changing. Why would any black person want him near the confederate carvings. They need to find another place to carve his racist face or bell. Mlk never did anything for whites or the races in a whole. He was a nasty adulterer who screwed around on his wife throughout their marriage setting up orgys for himself and his buddies. There is no honor in him and he shamed himself by having the gall to call himself reverend. Black people are only interested in how they can get back at whites and this is just another way to do so. I read some of these comments on here by racists getting a kick out of putting anything about mlk on the confederate mountain and all I see is childish retaliation like little kids trying to get back at whites. You just can't get over the fact that my and other whites ancestors owned yours. Well mine did have slaves but you continue to blame whites for what was legal 150 yrs ago. You can't compare those times in that period to today. Blacks owned black slaves too as well as the northern people and generals. Even good ole Abe and his looney wife used her mammy in Illinois breaking the law of that state. Your northern written history books don't have that in it. If I were black I wouldn't want mlk anywhere near the confederates. The more confederate memorabilia are removed and desecrated the more will go up. People like me who owns acreage has offered my land for flags, monuments or anything else confederate. Black people are so racist it just eats them up inside. Get over slavery. It was legal and it was over 150 yrs ago but not until the last NORTHERN slave holder released THEIR slaves. The confederacy lives on no matter what racists do...
You can put an MLK monument there. When I find where it is, I will simply step around it and enjoy the real memorial heritage of Stone Mountain.
MLK wasn't fit to lick Robert E. Lee's boots.
My fellow Black people of GA and beyond, please stand against this unholy idea. We have begged White people for far too long to accept us in their arenas. Placing anything in the name of Dr. King at this Confederate memorial would be an insult to his legacy, in particular, and the legacy of our ancestors murdered by those that desired to maintain White supremacy, in general. I implore you with all my heart to resist this effort. In honor of Dr. King and our ancestors, let's stop being the only ethnic group that begs his oppressor for acceptance. Peace...
As a historian, I think it's a terrible idea to try to appease everyone. This is a confederate memorial and is rich with history. Regardless, if it is loved or hated is irrelevant, it's history. Trying to make everything politically correct is destroying it's meaning. This is simply a "I'll show you" type of grandstanding. This is not a "compromise". It only causes racial strife. MLK had nothing to do with the confederacy or the civil war. To put a statue there is simply silly. It would be no different than having Bill Clinton's monument at a WW2 memorial. Simply ridiculous.
Bad news and a stupid idea. Don't know about you, but every MLK Blvd. I seem to have driven down was in a drug infested, crack infested, thug neighborhood. It just doesn't belong there, period.
Stone Mountain was created as a Confederate Memorial, even the article states 'The act of the General Assembly which created the Stone Mountain Memorial Association specifically states the park, including both the mountain and all adjacent property, is to be maintained and operated as a Confederate memorial (OCGA 12-3-191)." So adding something unrelated to the Confederate Memorial would be against the said purpose of the memorial. I'm guessing it will also have to be reviewed under state laws by the Georgia Historic Preservation Office.
There's something wrong with a person who wants a statue, or anything else, honoring a thief, plagiarist, liar, serial womanizer and abuser of women on the top of Stone Mountain, or anywhere else. Martin Luther King Jr. spent the last night of his life in bed with two prostitutes and when confronted by a woman with whom he'd been having an affair, he knocked her across the bed. (This is all confirmed in Ralph Abernathy's book, "When the Walls Came Tumbling Down.") Boston College discovered King plagiarized his doctoral dissertation and had he not been black, his doctorate degree would have been withdrawn. (See the New York Times of October 11, 1991). When King attended JFK’s funeral, Bobby Kennedy learned he attempted to arrange a “sex party” – one of his favorite pastimes – and this is the reason Jacqueline Kennedy despised him, as evidenced in her tapes, which were released in 2011. Even King’s famous “I have a dream” speech wasn’t original. He stole it from a speech given by Rev. Archibald Carey at the Republican National Convention August 28, 1963. The man was such a degenerate that in 1977, FBI files on his activities were sealed and won’t be released until 2027. Had those files been released to the public, his birthday would never have become a national holiday. I have nothing against honoring deserving blacks, but Martin Luther King Jr. was a despicable human being who deserves nothing!
@CatherineDavis
Heard he was a cheater but did not know to what degree. So this guy is some super hero? Maybe those wanting a bell tower should just open up a brothel instead.
They will lose in court, this will not happen, it is in clear violation of the law.
§ 50-3-1 - Description of state flag; militia to carry flag; defacing public monuments; obstruction of Stone Mountain(2) No publicly owned monument or memorial erected, constructed, created, or maintained on the public property of this state or its agencies, departments, authorities, or instrumentalities in honor of the military service of any past or present military personnel of this state, the United States of America or the several states thereof, or the Confederate States of America or the several states thereof shall be relocated, removed, concealed, obscured, or altered in any fashion.
Since this would clearly be "altering in any fashion" an existing Confederate monument for reasons other than the appropriate measures for the preservation, protection, and interpretation of such monuments or memorials, it is thus illegal.
Court case incoming, plans to be dropped within 6 months.
@Buffmuffin Is this a Georgia state law, or a Federal Law?
Wow I'm just amazed so many want to claim racism doesn't still exist but the proof shines brightly in the comments here. The hate is sickening and shameful. The same people sitting behind their computers, typing some of the most nasty and hateful comments will be in church on Sunday, praying, talking about love, and singing hymns about a God they display no attributes of. I honestly could care less if they do or don't put at monument there. I'm not opposed to it but it wouldn't make or break my life either. Soo many people act like their life is contingent on what happens on that mountain.... are there not bigger fish to fry, how about our youth, our school systems, our infrastructure, jobs, our own families??. I honestly think some of you people live and die to have something to hate. Do you not have family, and a life to live other than worrying about a mountain??. Whites saying get over slavery its in the past all the while feeling they have a right to hang on to their past and their history. Blacks thinking that erecting another monument and crying for the distruction of carvings is some how going to fix something or take the hate and racism out of the heart. That's not gonna take hate out the hearts of people who have been brought up and spoon fed hate by the bowl. Hate preached from grandma and grand pappy before you even old enough to walk. Miserable people hate its all they have to live for other wise they'd find more productive things to do with their lives. Seems most of this hate isn't gonna end until those people who were brought up in that Era of Jim crow, white supremacy, and the pinnacle of the KKK pass, and the kids they've taught it to pass and hopefully a lot of the hate with them. I wish that were the case but sadly after all these years hate is the one misery that never seems to die. When our schools do a better job of teaching tolerance, and the history of all people maybe just may be our kids can grow up and be better human beings then we have turned out to be. All this hate over a mountain that at the end of the day proves what and makes who's life better????. These same people hiding behind a computer get up and go smile in the face of the other race everyday, work togather, eat togather and some how it hasnt killed you. Every race can find something negative about the other when your sole purpose is to look for the negative in another. We pass people everyday who we know nothing about, who have done nothing personally to us, yet you hate them for no other reason than their skin color is different, absolutely stupid!!. I see kids getting it right everyday they take people at face value, the hate they learn is from us filling their heads with the kind of crap I've read here. Most of which none of you would stand in front of the people whos path you cross everyday and say to their face. I know God is looking down on us with a hurting heart, may God have mercy on all of us and on this beautiful country that we choose to fill with bigotry and hate.
@FredaAllen I think white people these days are racist because of contact with lots of bad black people. Nothing to do with Jim Crow or "grandpappy": just personal experience. I know plenty of whites who were former race liberals, but after a little time in the ghetto, their ideas turned right around. It's not fair to paint all blacks with the same brush, but nor is it fair to call all whites "haters". And yes, I agree that blacks post-Jim Crow still experience white racism. What's the solution? Re-segregation? Separate countries? Or maybe accept that we still rub along together in general better than white folks do in the Ukraine, or black folks in the Sudan.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Liberty Bell Monument at the SUMMIT or PINNACLE of Stone Mountain is a GREAT, GREAT, GREAT idea !!!
Thank you Bill Stephens, CEO Stone Mountain Memorial Association, State Authorities, Governor Nathan Deal and others for this gesture of goodwill in presenting a more balanced view of history.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. + Stone Mountain Summit = COMPROMISE
Dr King spirit can now hear freedom ring from this magnificent granite rock in Stone Mountain,Georgia.
We eagerly await the Grand Opening.
@Charles Douglas Edwards Get some help. The drugs are effecting your brain. Sorry, too late, no brains left.
Hey Joe Bob (with a name like that I'm thinking you're missing a few teeth too), the correct spelling is 'affecting'. As in, "your bigotry is affecting your judgement".
@Charles Douglas Edwards "Balanced" view of history? it's a confederate museum. MLK was not part of the Civil War. I have been to countless museums and can assure you putting up a monument not related to the museum is simply confusing. Controversy is o.k, but this is simply odd and confusing. I am really surprised that you done't see how pandering this is. When people see this, they are going to think, "We'll they had to satisfy African-Americans with something totally irrelevant to this museum".
A monument to MLK does seem totally out of place at Stone Mountain. If they want to offset the Confederate memorial, then make Stone Mountain a more inclusive Civil War site, and include monuments to Union generals, or even slavery, but a statue of MLK is just pandering to African Americans.
@Atlantarama I agree, but by state law only monuments and memorials to the confederacy can be raised or displayed there.
But, while I think it is a fitting memorial it is still illegal to place it on top of stone mountain or in the park altogether.
@NKRider That is not true at all, who told you that crap?
At first when I read head line I was aghast at the idea. I thought it was going to be some gaudy statue with no particular meaning other than erecting a statue of a dead black guy.
But Dr. King did a lot for race relations back then, his I have a dream speech is iconic and I think it is fitting to place a bell there so people maybe will reread that speech and learn from it again. Race relations since that speech improved greatly all the way up until we got this President in office. A president who is doing everything in his power to undue and destroy everything Dr. King tried to create, who has singlehandedly set race relations for some people back to 1940. Unfortunately this president in his willingness to destroy race relations in our country has the support of some of Dr. Kings closest alleys, how unfortunate.
Best place to put MLK Statue...can only see it from a helicopter or airplane...out of sight ,out of mind as my pappy always said.
Michael King or whatever his real name is has no place on a CONFEDERATE MEMORIAL! This is a BAD IDEA that will only result in more hatred among the races. The AJC article makes it sound like the inhabitants of Stone Mountain determine the monuments within. How long till we have a Muslim call to prayer coming from up there. Don't say it can't happen!
There were13,000 black confederates who saw combat this is documented by a black professor from Georgetown. Get it right AJC.
@leefrommeeks Then put a black confederate there.
@leefrommeeks There were thousands who served AS SLAVES.
Not one penny should go to the King family!
@Keith Bryant You not use MLK without paying the king family. Bet the atlanta urinal will not talk about the pay off when it happens.
It amazes me how the news papers, media in general, politicians, and ourselves find new ways to divide America / each other. Give it a rest.... Slavery is over... get over it your skin is white and theirs are black...so what..... All the problems going on in the world and people still can't get over the fact that we are different colors.... unbelievable!!!!
@Bordertownbound What does slavery have to do with it in 21st century America?
@Bordertownbound The monument is not divisive,it is uniting.
@stubbikins @Bordertownbound It's patronizing.
Oh good lord. Doesnt he already have his own Museum? Is there a section to include his mistresses?
Please keep us posted as to the ransom that will need to be paid to the King family
It is so entertaining to read the bigot's wails and cries and twisted defenses of their bigotry.
Who knew that a rock built on another rock could cause the bigots blood pressure to go up. HHAHAHAHAHAH. Man you bigots are absolutely to easy! Don't you all have other things to worry about? Like them prying your guns from your cold dead fingers? Or bringing MARTA OTP? Come on bigots, don't let a piece of rock built on another rock have so much power to control you! You bigots are better than that! Shouldn't you bigots be raising heck about that Gay Pride parade and the BET awards this week! I am providing you bigots with a cache full of things to rant and rave about! Who cares if they build a rock on a another rock! Geez! Who cares about Dr. Martin Luther King! Come on bigots that guy is dead and gone ( or does he have that much power from the grave...you guys cant be serious!) Let them build whatever they want on that rock! You bigots got bigger fish to fry! President Obama is still in office. Yea that is a good one! He always gets you bigots riled up! How in the heck does that guy hang around ruining your country for 8 years! Come on bigots we got to find something else! This rock don't mean nothing to you good old boys and girls...or is it "part of your heritage"? HEEEhEHEHHEHEHE. That never gets old! That heritage speech! Wait, wait I got more for you! Go find the articles about black on black crime and give us those statistics you bigots love to spread so freely about blacks in jail and all that stuff! Come on guys this rock has no hold on how you guys can toss those statistics around like you do. I know there are more worth while articles on the AJC that you bigots can go and spew your hate and disdain. Let them have this rock and put whatever they want to put on top of it. Who cares? Except you bigots! He has enough statues as you bigots say and one more just might tip the scale! Fight bigots fight!
HAHAHAHAH. You bigots are too easy! The AJC keeps you fools all riled up and make you show your bigotry on a daily basis.
@AnsweredTHIS Sounds like the AJC has you riled up....I don't give a darn what on the rock. Agree mostly with you but not the (fool) way you said it... you used the word bigots 17 times ? who's riled up? As for the AJC we all know they're the Liberal Democrats voice so believe what you wish it's one sided. Have a better day.
@58Supersports @AnsweredTHIS
Did I hit a nerve? You counted? Fool way you say? Who's the real fool? What does that say about you? Check the remarks on the blog and you tell me how many bigots you see? That's 18 for you now! And you have a great day as well!
To all the historically ignorant who still believe the war was about slavery, answer the following;
1. What about the Corwin Amendment? (Look it up)
2. What about the Crittenden-Johnson Resolution? (Look it up)
3. What about the Union soldiers, and officers who owned slaves? (What were they fighting for?)
4. Why was West Virginia allowed to leave the South and join the Union on the condition it could keep its slaves? (And West Virginia, by the way, was illegally formed)
@cwipaulk Agreed. It has been an agenda of modern education to turn the civil war into strictly a "slave" discussion. So much now, you are a bigot to try an tell others about the more prevalent facts associated with the civil war.
I don't go to Stone Mountain anymore because you have to drive through the new Urban Jungle known as Dekalb County to get there.
"As a three-dimensional history lesson, Stone Mountain has pushed a one-sided view of America’s bloodiest conflict — one that hasn’t changed much since the 1960s and ignores its impact on nearly half of this state’s Civil War population. That is, the portion that was in chains."
Is the author BLIND, or just an ideological idiot?
We have every city and town in the U.S. with streets named after this communist fraud, and now these scalawag politicians want to desecrate our great Stone Mountain Monument with a memorial to this rioteer. Absolutely disgusting! No guts are to be found in our Southern politicians today. They need to be hung from MLK street signs.
"Tim Pilgrim, head of the Georgia chapter of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, said the plan is insulting."
Message to Tim Pilgrim - President Ronald Reagan told the USSR "Tear Down that Wall". The American People are telling the People of Georgia - "Sand blast those dead confederate generals (traitors) off the face of Stone Mountain."
I hope anybody from Georgia who plans to visit our Nations Capital, Washington D.C. take the opportunity to see the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial located on the National Mall. The King Memorial is a replica of Stone Mountain with Dr. King emerging from the center surrounded by other statues and plaques celebrating the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. There are no dead confederate generals (traitors) or racist confederate flags displayed on the King Memorial. Millions of people from all across the USA and from around the world visit the King Memorial.
Stone Mountain is an embarrassment to all the People of Georgia. I am looking forward to sand blasting all those dead confederate generals off the face of Stone Mountain and replacing them with carvings of President Obama the 1st Black American President of the USA (2008-2016) and soon to be Madam President Hillary Clinton the 1st American Woman President of the USA (2016 -2024).
@cwipaulk - I forgive you and may God almighty have mercy on your sinful Soul.
@Robert1959 It's not an embarrassment to this historian. Sad that you know so little about the Civil War.
@Robert1959 You are sadly historically ignorant. 150 years of Marxist rewritten history has done its job on you, and many like you. Confederates were not traitors. None were tried for treason because, as Chief Justice Samuel P. Chase said, they could not be tried because "What was won on the battle field would be lost in the courtroom". He knew that secession was NOT illegal. If the Confederates were traitors, then how could the Founding Fathers not be traitors. They did the same thing in seceding from Great Britain. The South fought for the same reasons our colonial ancestors fought; to rid themselves of a tyrannical government, for individual liberty, resistance to excessive taxes, and the right to self-govern.
MLK was a fraud and a communist collaborator. He started riots everywhere he went.
@Robert1959 You idolize a man who was a plagiarist, liar, thief, serial adulterer and abuser of women, so no one is surprised you would like to see the images of honorable men sandblasted off Stone Mountain. As for Hillary, not only will she never be called "Madam President," she won't even be nominated. The Democratic nominee will likely be Joe Biden, whom, I hope, will lose to Donald Trump in the general election.