Screenshot / County of Albemarle Facebook

Workers in Charlottesville, Virginia lifted a confederate statue from its pedestal early Saturday morning near the location of the deadly 2017 Unite the Right Rally.

A small crowd gathered to watch the statue of a confederate soldier known as At Ready come down outside the Albemarle County courthouse. A block away stands a statue of Robert E. Lee, which was the focal point of the violent Unite the Right Rally, where white supremacists clashed with counter-protesters. A self-proclaimed Neo-Nazi intentionally drove a car through the crowd of protesters, killing one and injuring 35 others.

Earlier this summer, Albermarle County supervisors voted to remove the At Ready statue, which has been outside the courthouse for more than 100 years.

The statue is the latest Confederate monument to come down this summer (either by force or official approval) during nationwide protests for racial justice. In June, several monuments were torn down, beheaded, and even thrown into lakes across Virginia. In D.C., protesters knocked down and burned the statue of Confederate general Albert Pike in Judiciary Square during Juneteenth demonstrations.

Others are set to come down through a more formal process; in July, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to remove Confederate statues (Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis, among others) from the U.S. Capitol building.

While the At Ready statue no longer stands, Charlottesville’s efforts to remove the nearby Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson statues are stuck in legal dispute. The city’s council voted to remove both statues in 2017 following the violent rally, but defenders of the statues filed a lawsuit to preserve the monuments. The case is headed to the Virginia Supreme Court.