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OHIO WEATHER

What to do with Christopher Columbus statue


The Christopher Columbus statue shown being removed from Columbus City Hall in July 2020 remains part of the city’s public art collection and is in storage under the oversight of a conservation professional.

He departed more than a year ago on what may have been his final voyage.

Christopher Columbus is still out there somewhere, foundering on the seas of storage, an explorer without a home port or a specific destination.

He peers out at the empty sea before him but sees nothing because of the blinding fog and because his eyes, like the rest of him, are cast in bronze.

He senses danger nonetheless. He knows he is beset by fickle winds, conflicting currents, waves as tall as mountains, battering him from all directions.

Columbus Dispatch metro columnist Theodore Decker

“Oh,” he calls out, “what Fate awaits us?”

He directs the question to his first mate, but his first mate does not exist in this time and place. No one knows the name of his first mate, not now and maybe not even 530 years ago. First mates are not turned into statues. First mates are not immortal.

Startlingly, an answer still comes.

“Hard to say. These are uncharted waters you’re in.”

The voice belongs to that of a Columbus city employee, who happens to be pushing a broom past Columbus the statue at that very moment and, even more serendipitously for the statue, who had been dragged to the movie theater by a girlfriend to see “Mannequin” in 1987, and dragged again and again by his children to all four “Toy Story” movies.



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