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Governor Ralph Northam announced it would come down amid national protests after the death of George Floyd.
The statue became a focal point for this activism and crowds cheered as a crane removed it on Wednesday.
Memorials to leaders of the pro-slavery, Confederate states – whose capital was Richmond – have long stirred controversy.
While the removal of these statues is often done with little fanfare, authorities broadcast Wednesday’s removal on social media. Large crowds also gathered at the site.
Earlier in the week, Mr Northam called the statue “a monument to the Confederate insurrection”.
The statue’s 40ft (12m) pedestal, which is still covered in graffiti from the 2020 protests, will remain in place. Local officials have said that it will stay there until the area is “reimagined.”

A seismic shift

In a moment fraught with symbolism, the statue of the leader of the Confederate Army has come down in the city that was once the capital of the Confederacy.
It was no coincidence that most of the confederate statues were erected not in the immediate aftermath of the war, but in the early 20th Century, as the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan gained power and southern legislatures enacted Jim Crow laws disenfranchising blacks.
Lee’s removal reflects the seismic shift in attitudes toward the Confederacy in much of the US South – especially Virginia, where changes in demographics and political perspectives have been particularly pronounced.

The governor’s plans to remove the statue in 2020 were delayed by two separate lawsuits by Richmond residents opposed to its removal.
Last week, however, Virginia’s Supreme Court rejected the lawsuits, paving the way for the statue to be removed.

“This is an important step in showing who we are and what we value as a Commonwealth,” Governor Northam said.
Hundreds of statues of General Lee and other famous Confederate figures exist throughout the US.
Since a wave of protests engulfed the US following George Floyd’s death at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer, more than a dozen statues have been removed in Richmond alone.