Mayor: Kate Smith's ‘God Bless America' will continue to play on Wildwood boardwalk

(Photo by Andre Ringuette/Getty Images)

The mayor of Wildwood told a local radio show that Kate Smith’s "God Bless America" will continue to play on the boardwalk amid racism allegations.

Wildwood Mayor Ernie Troiano Jr. appeared on The Dom Giordano show on 1210 WPHT Monday morning. 

“I’m a small town mayor, and I look at what’s happening to the world, and it’s amazing how everyone wants to rewrite history,” Troiano Jr. said.  “Nobody wants to allow history to be an educator and a teacher to help us improve in the future.”

"God Bless America" plays at 11 a.m. daily on the Wildwood boardwalk.

“The song is greater than anything, so you know what; it’ll continue to play in Wildwood.”

The Philadelphia Flyers removed a statue of late singer Kate Smith outside NHL team's arena Sunday, two days after covering it.

"The NHL principle 'Hockey is for Everyone' is at the heart of everything the Flyers stand for," Flyers President Paul Holmgren said in a statement. "As a result, we cannot stand idle while material from another era gets in the way of who we are today."

On Friday, the Flyers said Smith's "God Bless America" recording had been removed from their library, following baseball's New York Yankees.

The Yankees suspended use of Smith's recording during the seventh-inning stretch amid conflicting claims about several of her songs, including a 1939 song "That's Why the Darkies Were Born." The tune originated in the 1931 Broadway revue "George White's Scandals," and was considered satire at the time. Smith's likeness also appears in a 1939 ad that heavily uses the mammy caricature, one of the most well-known racist depictions of black women.

Smith's connection with the Flyers started in 1969 when a team executive ordered her version of "God Bless America" to be played instead of "The Star Spangled Banner." That led to her performing the song several times before games in the 1970s. A year after her 1986 death, the team erected the statue.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.