Rebel on Main

By: David Swartz
  • Summary

  • A podcast investigation about a rebel statue in Kentucky’s Bluegrass. His belt buckle is Confederate, but he wears a Union hat. Is he a monument to heroism? Or a symbol of treason and racism? Rebel on Main chronicles this statue’s bizarre biography—and the haunting story of the community that now decides its fate.
    Copyright 2025 All rights reserved.
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Episodes
  • A Confederate from Canada
    Feb 3 2025

    Bob Barney doesn’t care at all about the statue—until he does. A Canadian transplant to Jessamine, his ancestry traces back to abolitionist New England. But as the 2020 election approaches, Bob sees a political opening. For months prior to the election, he spends three hours a night working through a list of 13,500 Democrats conducting a telephone survey.

    The work is arduous and often dispiriting. It takes fifteen phone dials to get one person to talk, and sometimes that person just hangs up or refuses to answer Bob’s questions. Nevertheless, he is able to convince many pro-statue Democrats to switch parties. Confederate controversies cement the Republican takeover of Jessamine.

    Timestamps

    01:38 David walks two doors down from his house to interview Bob

    15:22 Bob describes his telephone survey and how he’s using it to defeat Democratic candidate Carolyn Dupont.

    20:45 Pastor Moses responds.

    25:03 Carolyn Dupont responds.

    31:54 Blue Lives Matter rally at the courthouse

    39:00 November 2020

    43:52 David reflects on local politics and his relationship with Bob.

    Transcript: Visit www.rebelonmain.com/episode6.

    Engage

    • Check out our website at rebelonmain.com.
    • To support future creative projects, contribute here: rebelonmain.com/support
    • Email david.swartz@asbury.edu to let me know what you think of this episode of Rebel on Main.

    Resources

    • For pictures of the Back the Blue rally and video of the scuffle at the courthouse, head to rebelonmain.com/episode6.
    • Carolyn Dupont, Mississippi Praying: Southern White Evangelicals and the Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1975

    Production team

    • Writer and Host: David R. Swartz
    • Original Music, Sound Design, and Mixing: Barry Blair
    • Story Editor: Stephen Smith
    • Artistic Design: Josh Smith and Lisa Weaver Swartz

    Next episode: In Episode 7—Change Is Gonna Come—find out what happens after a final push to remove Jessamine County’s Confederate statue.

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    49 mins
  • A Rival Monument
    Jan 27 2025

    Archaeologist Stephen McBride wants to emancipate Jessamine from the Lost Cause. He zeroes in on Camp Nelson, which has nearly disappeared from the county’s memory. Farmers have leveled the earthworks, and developers are eyeing the site. Camp Nelson’s significance has also been buried by racial hostility. Many in the local Black community have been driven off by lynchings, KKK rallies, and backlash to the civil rights movement.

    As construction workers begin to widen a state highway that cuts through the site, Jessamine’s best emancipationist memory is under threat of being permanently erased. But this disastrous development becomes the site’s salvation. The state historical commission steps in and gives McBride a year to recover what he can before the bulldozers return. To nearly everyone’s delight, the archaeologist unearths a long-buried narrative that once again tells hard stories about racial violence and inspirational stories about Black freedom. Camp Nelson begins to duel with the statue over the county’s Civil War memory.

    Resources

    • For pictures of Jenna, Pastor Moses, and the Wilmore march, head to rebelonmain.com/episode5.
    • George Wright, A History of Blacks In Kentucky: In Pursuit of Equality, 1890-1980

    Engage

    • Check out our website at rebelonmain.com.
    • To support future creative projects, click here: rebelonmain.com/support.
    • Email david.swartz@asbury.edu to let me know what you think of this episode of Rebel on Main.
    • Please give a rating on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.

    Timestamps

    00:00 As activists wait for Judge West to act on Jenna’s petition, Camp Nelson rises from the ground.

    02:57 Archaeologist Stephen McBride describes his digs at Camp Nelson.

    30:09 Calvonia Radford discusses the preservation of Black history.

    32:51 Rev. Gates explains why he is suspicious of my interest in Black history. He tells stories of his descendants at Camp Nelson.

    46:40 Judge West discusses the significance of Black history and the story of Camp Nelson becoming a national monument.

    53:05 A luminaria in lament of the 1864 expulsion is the first event held at Camp Nelson National Monument.

    Transcript: Visit www.rebelonmain.com/episode5.

    Production team

    • Writer and Host: David R. Swartz
    • Original Music, Sound Design, and Mixing: Barry Blair
    • Story Editor: Stephen Smith
    • Artistic Design: Josh Smith and Lisa Weaver Swartz

    Next episode: In Episode 6—A Confederate from Canada—a political activist uses the Confederate statue to win the 2020 election.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Jenna's Petition
    Jan 20 2025

    Two weeks into the Black Lives Matter campaign, homeschooler Jenna Sparks gets mad. This sixteen-year-old descendant of a Confederate ancestor, whose name was Jeptha Jefferson Davis Sparks, has a Black cousin, and seeing so many people in Jessamine who fly the Confederate battle flag angers her. So does walking by the Confederate statue, located just two blocks from her house.

    So Jenna writes a petition to “remove and destroy” the statue. Hundreds of locals immediately sign, and her campaign makes the news. An interracial group of ministers led by Pastor Moses of First Baptist Church circulates Jenna’s petition. Then they write and submit their own to the judge. Jessamine County seems poised to reckon with its sordid record on race and Civil War memory.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Sitting on her front porch, Jenna explains why she wants to destroy the statue.

    07:58 Pastor Moses starts an interracial ministerial committee.

    14:00 Pastor Max Vanderpool describes racial conditions in Jessamine County.

    18:25 The ministerial committee ramps up.

    30:48 A “Black Lives Matter” rally in Wilmore

    38:08 Resistance emerges.

    47:09 Antistatue activists resolve to continue their campaign.

    Transcript: Visit www.rebelonmain.com/episode4/transcript.

    Engage

    • Check out our website at rebelonmain.com.
    • To support future creative projects, contribute here: rebelonmain.com/support.
    • Email swartz@asbury.edu to let me know what you think of this episode of Rebel on Main.
    • Please give a rating on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.

    Resources

    • For pictures of Jenna, Pastor Moses, and the Wilmore march, head to rebelonmain.com/episode4.
    • George Wright, A History of Blacks In Kentucky: In Pursuit of Equality, 1890-1980
    • Michael Emerson and Christian Smith, Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America
    • On the Fallen Monuments Park in Moscow, see https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/fallen-monument-park.

    Production team

    • Writer and Host: David R. Swartz
    • Original Music, Sound Design, and Mixing: Barry Blair
    • Story Editor: Stephen Smith
    • Artistic Design: Josh Smith and Lisa Weaver Swartz

    Next episode: In Episode 5—Rival Monument—a very different narrative of the Civil War emerges from the ground.

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    52 mins

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