President Donald Trump has spent much of the past year on a renovation tear. He’s added gilding to the Oval Office, begun work on a massive ballroom after demolishing the East Wing and added a virtual copy of Mar-a-Lago’s patio on top of the Rose Garden. The Washington Post reported Tuesday that Trump’s latest vision involves plans to install a statue of Christopher Columbus on the White House grounds.
A few things stand out from the decision to grant the Italian explorer’s stony visage a place of honor. The Columbus statue in question is a reconstruction of one that previously stood in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. President Ronald Reagan joined the city’s mayor in its unveiling at the statue’s dedication ceremony in 1984. Decades later, it was torn down and flung into the harbor, one of many statues depicting colonizers and/or racists removed around the country during the 2020 protests following the death of George Floyd.
A few things stand out from the decision to grant the Italian explorer’s stony visage a place of honor.
The statute didn’t remain submerged for long before a local fisherman, Tilghman Hemsley, hired a dive crew to fish it out. By 2022, his son, artist Will Hemsley, had finished a recreation based on 3D scans of the original. Among the main supporters of the project was Bill Martin, a leader with the group that organized Baltimore’s Columbus Day parade. Martin told the Star Democrat in 2022 that the Interior Department had considered including the rebuilt statue in the “National Garden of American Heroes” that Trump proposed toward the end of his first term.
Trump’s loss in 2020 meant his sculpture garden vision never came to fruition, leaving the Columbus statue without a home. But its relocation to the White House has apparently been in the works for months. WBFF, a local Fox station, reported last October that the statue was meant to arrive in Washington before Columbus Day, but was delayed due to Trump’s trip to the Middle East.

Instead, Trump signed a Columbus Day proclamation fulling his promise months earlier to bring the holiday “back from the ashes.” In doing so, he demoted Indigenous Peoples Day from the shared spotlight it had only briefly enjoyed as a federal holiday. Trump was so proud of this supposed achievement that he suggested it might influence the midterm elections during his (even more rambling than usual) press briefing last month:








