Last weekend’s deadly violence in Charlottesville originally began as a “Unite the Right” white supremacist protest against the re-location of a Robert E. Lee statue in a public park. Since then, Donald Trump has been busy defending the statue (and comparing confederate generals to George Washington), while officials and activists in some cities have been rushing to take down public displays memorializing the confederacy. Activists toppled a Confederate Soldier’s Monument in North Carolina, Baltimore’s mayor ordered a swift overnight removal of the city’s four remaining confederate memorials, and New York City mayor Bill de Blasio has announced a 90-day plan for the removal of the city’s “hate symbols.”


One takeaway from all this: even in liberal-leaning northern cities, confederate memorials are far more numerous than you might think. In the interest of helping citizens track down monuments in their own hometowns, Quartz has created a tool that lets you search confederate monuments across the U.S., by zip code. (The data comes from the Southern Poverty Law Center’s 2015 list of Confederate Monuments.)

Like so:


Click through to find out what monuments are still standing near you, and lobby your local politicians accordingly. Oh, and if they do take those statues down, CityLab has some ideas on how to re-purpose that space.