Wagga's Indigenous community members have urged the city to listen to their concerns about some historical street names following the Black Lives Matter rally.
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Wiradjuri man Mark Saddler said Captain Cook Drive on top of Willans Hill was one name he would like to see changed.
"Why have we got a street named like that at the centre of our town at one of our Wiradjuri special places?" he said.
"That's just one thing that people probably don't look at but Wiradjuri and Aboriginal people see that as something that could be talked about and changed in the future."
The road was named Captain Cook Drive in 1970 "to commemorate the 200th Anniversary of the discovery and exploration of the east coast of Australia", as stated by a plaque on the hilltop.
Wiradjuri man and Wagga Black Lives Matter rally organiser Joe Williams said he agreed about Captain Cook Drive and it should be renamed "after an Aboriginal resistance warrior".
Wagga's Lord Baden Powell Drive could be the next monument to be targeted by protesters.
UK Group 'Topple the Racists' has called for a statue of Lord Baden-Powell to be removed from Poole, a town in southern England, over claims that he was responsible for Zulu deaths in South Africa and sympathised with Adolf Hitler.
Lord Baden-Powell's biographers have disputed both claims about his history as false or misinterpretations.
According to the 'Streets of Wagga' publication by Wagga City Council, the drive across Willans Hill was named after Lord Baden-Powell due to his role in founding the Scouting movement and his widow's visits to Wagga Girl Guides.
Mr Williams said debates over removing statues and memorials was a "sign of things to come" and called for more recognition of massacres of Aboriginal people in the Riverina.
"People might scream about political correctness, but to me it's about what's right and wrong," he said.
"How many statues and streets are there for Hitler? We have got, just outside Wagga, Poisoned Waterholes Creek and there probably should be some signage about what happened out there.
"It's not about making people feel bad, it's about education."
Mr Saddler said pulling down statues was "not any way forward" and "sometimes statues can remind us of the bad that people have done".
"I think tearing down statues is like a pack of people running around with no focus on how they are going to fix things," he said.
"Pulling a statue down isn't going to change the world; destroying artifacts isn't going to change the world, it just makes people more cranky."
Wagga councillor Kerry Pascoe said he did not support changing the name of Captain Cook Drive or Lord Baden Powell Drive.
"There is something that needs to be sorted out with Aboriginal people, I don't deny that, but this is all going to far," he said.
Cr Pascoe pointed to the Council's record of using Aboriginal names for new streets and the projects like the Wiradjuri Bridge at Travers Street.
Cr Vanessa Keenan said she supported having a discussion with the community about the issue as "history is often only told through the voices of privilege and white, powerful men".
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"We always have a skewed view of events in terms of history in Australia and other similar countries," she said.
A Wagga City Council statement said it would "review any submission made with regards to naming or renaming a road".
"Any recommendation to rename a road would need to follow process and be put to councillors for consideration," the statement said.
"Any recommended change would also require sign off from the Geographical Names Board of NSW."