Arthur Ashe July 10, 1943 – February 6, 1993 “Where the Confederates Fell, Arthur Ashe Still Stands…” Arthur Ashe monument est. 1996 The irony of Richmond’s history, it was the capital of the confederacy and commemorating this was a fourteen long block of the city, Monument ave. The first monument erected in 1890 was one of General Robert E. Lee, eventually six total monuments of confederate military and political figures lined the ave by 1929. Ashe was born and raised in Richmond in a time when Jim Crow ruled and segregation kept him from playing against white players or using the indoor tennis courts. He went on to become the number one ranked player in 1975, had 76% winning avg, 76 titles and the only black man to win titles at Wimbledon, US Open and Australian open. For twenty one years his monument shared the avenue with statues and their representation of ideologies of black inferiority. As of 2020 Arthurs likeness is the only remaining monument left. “ We must believe in the power of education. We must respect just laws. We must love ourselves, our old and or young, our women as well as our men.” -Arthur Ashe #blackhistorymonth #blkrva #richmondva (at Richmond, Virginia) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZqfLgrOBby/?utm_medium=tumblr