The Confederate Senate approved Lee's recommendation that Pelham receive a posthumous promotion to
lieutenant colonel. Pelham's body was returned home and buried at City Cemetery in
Jacksonville, Alabama, where a statue erected downtown in 1909 commemorates the fallen Confederate officer. A stone obelisk monument honoring Pelham, which contained an inscription on the base referring to him as "gallant" and beloved and which had stood in the grassy median of a busy avenue in
Anniston, Alabama since 1905, was removed late at night on September 27, 2020. However, there were still plans to relocate it to a Confederate history park. In 1907, one of his
spurs was among the artifacts melted down to create the
Pokahuntas Bell for the
Jamestown Exposition. The John Pelham Historical Association preserves an archive of his papers and memorabilia. In 1955, the
Alabama Hall of Fame honored Pelham, inducting him into the honorific organization. The cities of
Pelham, Alabama and
Pelham, North Carolina, and
Pelham, Georgia are named in his honor. In 2004, against protests by some citizens, the state of
Georgia designated the section of State Highway 300 that passes through Pelham as the
John Pelham Memorial Parkway. The United States Field Artillery named artillery camps for him, such as the former Camp Pelham, which housed artillery battalions of first the 1st Cavalry Division and then later the 2nd Infantry Division in Korea. In the 1970s, The County of Culpeper, Virginia, built
Lake Pelham to memorialize Pelham. In October 2022, the lake was renamed Lake Culpeper. During and after the war, Pelham's 1858 photograph, taken in the
Mathew Brady studio, was well known by white Southerners still honoring the purposes of the Confederacy. While many copies were made, the original was long thought lost. It was held by Pelham's sister, Betty, and kept by her descendants at home in a fireproof safe. In 2010, Pelham's great-great grand-nephew consigned the piece for auction. It sold for $41,825. In March 2013, the city of
Jacksonville, Alabama celebrated Pelham with a weekend of living history campsites and a sesquicentennial recreation of Pelham's funeral procession to City Cemetery. == See also ==