- Ulysses S. Grant Memorial
The Ulysses S. Grant Memorial is a presidential memorial in
Washington, D.C. , honoringAmerican Civil War general and U.S. PresidentUlysses S. Grant . It is located at the base ofCapitol Hill (Union Square, the Mall, 1st Street, betweenPennsylvania Avenue and Maryland Avenue), below the west front of theUnited States Capitol . The monument's statue faces west toward theLincoln Memorial honoring Grant's wartime president,Abraham Lincoln . Equidistant between the Grant and Lincoln memorials, which define the east and west boundaries of theNational Mall , is theWashington Monument . The Grant Memorial includes the second largest equestrian statue in the United States and the third largest in the world, after the statue of Mexican conquistador Don Juan de Onate, in El Paso, Texas, and the monument to Italy's King Victor Emanuel in Rome. James M. Goode in his authoritative "The Grant Memorial in Washington D.C." says it "...constitutes one of the most important sculptures in Washington." [Goode 1974, p.244.] ". The Society of theArmy of the Tennessee [ [http://www.civilwarhome.com/grandarmyofrepublic.htm The Grand Army Of The Republic ] ] began the effort in the 1890's which culminated in the memorial's dedication decades later. [Sherrill 1924, p.18.]The Grant Memorial, begun in 1902 as the largest ever commissioned by Congress at the time, [Goode 1974, p.244.] was created by sculptor
Henry Merwin Shrady and architectWilliam Pearce Casey . [Goode 1974, p.243.] SculptorEdmund Amateis assisted Shrady as the monument neared completion in 1921. [Montagna 1987, p.55.] Shrady spent 20 years of his life working on the memorial and died, stressed and overworked, two weeks before its dedication in 1922. [Goode 1974, p.245.] The platform for the monument, made of Vermont marble, is convert|252|ft|m long and convert|71|ft|m wide and is divided into three sections. The tall, middle section features a 10,700 pound, convert|17|ft|2|in|m|sing=on high equestrian statue depicting Grant aboard his war horse Cincinnati on a 22 1/2-foot high marble pedestal. [Goode 1974, p.245.] Grant is flanked, on either side, by fighting Union Artillery and Cavalry groups. Surrounding the main pedestal are four shorter pedestals, each supporting a bronze lion in repose guarding both the United States flag and the flags of the Army. The memorial was the largest bronze sculpture cast in the United States at that time. [Goode 1974, p.244.], p.246.]
Construction on the site of the memorial began in 1909 when the marble superstructure and the four bronze lions were installed. The Artillery Group was installed in 1912, the Cavalry Group in 1916, and the bronze equestrian statue of Grant in 1920. The memorial was dedicated on the 100th anniversary of Grant's birth,
April 27 ,1922 . Shrady having died, the infantry panels on the base of Grant's pedestal were completed by sculptorSherry Fry based on Shrady's sketches and installed in 1924. [Montagna 1987, p.59.] The Grant Memorial composes the center of a three-part sculptural group including theJames A. Garfield Monument to the south and thePeace Monument to the north.References
*
*
*
Notes
External links
* [http://www.dcmemorials.com/henrymerwinshrady Additional photos at the Henry Merwin Shrady website]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.