The monument is an obelisk of white marble resting on a marble base which is supported by four steps of masonry. Two opposing faces feature
bas-relief carvings depicting enslaved Blacks, one side being a
mammy stereotype figure cradling a white baby and the other a Black wheat reaper. Also included is a list of ten faithful slaves, eight bearing the surname White. The inscription on the monument reads: The monument was dedicated in 1896 by local
cotton mill owner Samuel E. White and the Jefferson Davis Memorial Association. White, who had also sponsored the monument, was a former Confederate officer who was the son of
William Elliott White and scion of a family which had been prominent in Fort Mill since its founding, and founder of the
Springs Industries textile empire (of later "Miss Springmaid" fame). Smith also sponsored or led the efforts to install three other monuments, all on the Fort Mill town green: a generic confederate soldier monument (dedicated 1891), a monument to Confederate women, and a monument honoring the
Catawba people, native to the area. The main speaker at the dedication of the loyal slaves monument was entertainer
Polk Miller, a white defender of slavery, who in his remarks contrasted "uppity" African Americans of turn of the 20th century with the "Negro of the good old days gone by", suggesting that emancipation had been an unfortunate development. The Fort Mill loyal slaves monument, was the first Confederate memorial to acknowledge the existence of slavery rather than avoiding mention of it, and it is still the only Confederate monument that depicts both
house and
field slavery. ==Analysis and criticism==