The intercept flags are contradicting themselves — items 1 and 10 flag "Sculptor Charles Keck" as unsourced, but Charles Keck is named in Cvillepedia as the designer of the work. Items 3 and 12 flag "once a month, on Court Day, from 1762 to 1865" as unsourced, but the VPM source explicitly states sales occurred "once a month on 'Court Day'" and ran "from 1762 to 1865." Those facts are in the brief. I'll use them.
The installation date conflict between Wikipedia (1921) and Cvillepedia (1922) is genuine. I'll leave that year out rather than pick a side.
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Paul Goodloe McIntire deeded this 0.4-acre plot to Charlottesville in 1919 — land he'd assembled from four owners, a block once called McKee's Row. His condition: a park, and a statue of Stonewall Jackson, and nothing else.
The statue stood for decades. Meanwhile, the ground it occupied held older business. The VPM marker unveiled on March 3, 2025 makes that plain: enslaved people were sold at Court Square once a month, on Court Day, from 1762 to 1865. Those transactions were recorded in the Albemarle County Courthouse across the lane. They're still archived there.
In June 2017 the city council renamed the park Justice Park. By July 2018, it was Court Square Park. On July 10, 2021, the statue came down. The marker went up. The ground — what was given, what it witnessed — remains.
- ·Renamed Court Square Park in 2017.
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