• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Subscribe to Updates from NC CRED

NC Campaign to Remove Confederate MonumentsNorth Carolina Commission onRacial & Ethnic Disparitiesin the Criminal Justice System

Campaign to Remove Confederate Monuments

  • Home
  • About
  • Map & Directory
  • Toolkit
  • News
    • Latest News
    • Current Removal Efforts
  • Resources
    • Educational & Video
    • Legal
    • Harm and Trauma
  • Sign the Petition

Search NC Campaign to Remove Confederate Monuments

Pasquotank

Denial of request for declaratory ruling for Pasquotank County

January 28, 2021 by Megan Tate Murlless

Denial of request for declaratory ruling for Pasquotank County

Jan 28, 2021

Confederate monument in Elizabeth City needs to go, but has no takers

January 28, 2021 by Megan Tate Murlless

Confederate monument in Elizabeth City needs to go, but has no takers

Jan 28, 2021

Pasquotank County Confederate Monument

January 24, 2021 by Megan Tate Murlless

This statue is located at the Pasquotank County Courthouse. Both the statue and pedestal are made of granite. On the south side base, the year 1861 is inscribed along with a Confederate battle flag and the year 1865. A uniformed Confederate soldier wears a knife hanging from his belt on the left side and stands […]

Pasquotank County Confederate Monument

Jan 24, 2021

Footer

Contact

North Carolina Commission on
Racial & Ethnic Disparities
in the Criminal Justice System
PO Box 1588
Durham, NC 27702

About this Campaign

Coordinated by the North Carolina Commission on Racial and Ethnic Disparities (NC CRED), this campaign aims to support and educate all North Carolinians seeking to remove Confederate monuments from their communities. Our goal is the removal of all Confederate monuments from courthouse grounds in the state of North Carolina.

Campaign Resources

  • View Map of Monuments
  • View Toolkit
  • Latest Campaign News
  • Educational Resources
  • Legal Resources
  • Harm and Trauma
  • Sign the Petition

Copyright © 2025 · NC CRED · All Rights Reserved

View the New NC CRED “Undue Harms” Impact Report
Learn More Now

Continue to Website