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  Beyond the statues being discussed by President Trump and in states across the nation, Confederate sites range from small, privately owned house museums honoring obscure soldiers to the massive bas-reliefs carved in the side of Stone Mountain, Ga., that historian Fitzhugh Brundage calls "a billboard to white nationalism.'' These places are an almost inexhaustible source of potential flash points for battles between those who want to preserve or to remove Confederate symbols.

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