- National Statuary Hall Collection
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The National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol comprises statues donated by individual states to honor persons notable in their history. Originally set up in the old Hall of the House of Representatives, renamed National Statuary Hall, the expanding collection has since been spread throughout the Capitol.
With the addition of New Mexico's second statue in 2005, the collection is now complete with 100 statues contributed by 50 states. Alabama, California, Kansas, and Michigan each replaced one of their first two statues a few years after Congress authorized replacements.
A special act of Congress, Pub.L. 109-116, signed on December 1, 2005, directed the Joint Committee on the Library to obtain a statue of Rosa Parks and to place the statue in the United States Capitol in National Statuary Hall in a suitable permanent location.
Contents
History
The concept of a National Statuary Hall originated in the middle of the nineteenth century, even before the completion of the present House wing in 1857. At that time, the House of Representatives moved into its new larger chamber and the old vacant chamber became a thoroughfare between the Rotunda and the House wing. Suggestions for the use of the chamber were made as early as 1853 by Gouverneur Kemble, a former member of the House, who pressed for its use as a gallery of historical paintings. The space between the columns seemed too limited for this purpose, but it was well suited for the display of busts and statuary.
On April 19, 1864, Representative Justin S. Morrill asked: "To what end more useful or grand, and at the same time simple and inexpensive, can we devote it [the Chamber] than to ordain that it shall be set apart for the reception of such statuary as each State shall elect to be deserving of in this lasting commemoration?" His proposal to create a National Statuary Hall became law on July 2, 1864:
- [...] the President is hereby authorized to invite each and all the States to provide and furnish statues, in marble or bronze, not exceeding two in number for each State, of deceased persons who have been citizens thereof, and illustrious for their historic renown or for distinguished civic or military services such as each State may deem to be worthy of this national commemoration; and when so furnished the same shall be placed in the Old Hall of the House of Representatives, in the Capitol of the United States, which is set apart, or so much thereof as may be necessary, as a national statuary hall for the purpose herein indicated.
Originally, all state statues were placed in National Statuary Hall. However, the aesthetic appearance of the Hall began to suffer from overcrowding until, in 1933, the situation became unbearable. At that time the Hall held 65 statues, which stood, in some cases, three deep. More important, the structure of the chamber would not support the weight of any more statues. Therefore, in 1933 Congress passed a resolution that:
- the Architect of the Capitol, upon the approval of the Joint Committee on the Library, with the advice of the Commission of Fine Arts, is hereby authorized and directed to relocate within the Capitol any of the statues already received and placed in Statuary Hall, and to provide for the reception and location of the statues received hereafter from the States.
Under authority of this resolution it was decided that only one statue from each state should be placed in Statuary Hall. The others would be given prominent locations in designated areas and corridors of the Capitol. A second rearrangement of the statues was made in 1976 by authorization of the Joint Committee on the Library. To improve the crowded appearance of the collection, thirty-eight statues were rearranged in Statuary Hall according to height and material. Statues representing ten of the thirteen original colonies were moved to the Central Hall of the East Front Extension on the first floor of the Capitol. The remainder of the statues were distributed throughout the Capitol, mainly in the Hall of Columns and the connecting corridors of the House and Senate wings. Legislation has been introduced in 2005 that would authorize the collection to include one statue from each U.S. Territory, and another bill provides for the District of Columbia to participate.
Each statue is the gift of a state, not of an individual or group of citizens. Proceedings for the donation of a statue usually begin in the state legislature with the enactment of a resolution that names the citizen to be commemorated and cites his or her qualifications, specifies a committee or commission to represent the state in selecting the sculptor, and provides for a method of obtaining the necessary funds to carry the resolution into effect. In recent years, the statues have been unveiled during ceremonies in the Rotunda and displayed there for up to six months. They are then moved to a permanent location approved by the Joint Committee on the Library. An act of Congress (2 U.S.C. § 2132), enacted in 2000, permits states to provide replacements and repossess the earlier one.
Collection
State Honoree Image Medium Sculptor Date placed Location AL Helen Keller Bronze Edward Hlavka 2009 Capitol Visitor Center[1] AL Joseph Wheeler Bronze Berthold Nebel 1925 National Statuary Hall AK Edward Lewis "Bob" Bartlett Bronze Felix W. de Weldon 1971 House corridor, 2nd fl. AK Ernest Gruening Bronze George Anthonisen 1977 Capitol Visitor Center AZ John Campbell Greenway Bronze Gutzon Borglum 1930 National Statuary Hall AZ Eusebio F. Kino Bronze Suzanne Silvercruys 1965 Capitol Visitor Center AR Uriah Milton Rose Marble Frederick Ruckstull 1917 National Statuary Hall AR James Paul Clarke Marble Pompeo Coppini 1921 Capitol Visitor Center CA Ronald Reagan Bronze Chas Fagan 2009 Rotunda CA Junipero Serra Bronze Ettore Cadorin 1931 National Statuary Hall CO Florence R. Sabin Bronze Joy Buba 1959 Hall of Columns CO Jack Swigert Bronze George and
Mark Lundeen1997 Capitol Visitor Center CT Roger Sherman Marble Chauncey Ives 1872 The Crypt CT Jonathan Trumbull Marble Chauncey Ives 1872 House corridor, 2nd fl. DE John M. Clayton Marble Bryant Baker 1934 Capitol Visitor Center DE Caesar Rodney Marble Bryant Baker 1934 the Crypt FL John Gorrie Marble C. Adrian Pillars 1914 National Statuary Hall FL Edmund Kirby Smith Bronze C. Adrian Pillars 1922 Capitol Visitor Center GA Crawford W. Long Marble J. Massey Rhind 1926 the Crypt GA Alexander Stephens Marble Gutzon Borglum 1927 National Statuary Hall HI Father Damien Bronze Marisol Escobar 1969 Hall of Columns HI Kamehameha I Bronze Thomas R. Gould 1969 Capitol Visitor Center ID George Laird Shoup Marble Frederick E. Triebel 1910 National Statuary Hall ID William Edgar Borah Bronze Bryant Baker 1947 Capitol Visitor Center IL James Shields Bronze Leonard W. Volk 1893 Hall of Columns IL Frances E. Willard Marble Helen F. Mears 1905 National Statuary Hall IN Oliver Hazard Perry Morton Marble Charles Niehaus 1900 Senate Wing, 1st Floor IN Lewis Wallace Marble Andrew O'Connor 1910 National Statuary Hall IA James Harlan Bronze Nellie Walker 1910 Hall of Columns IA Samuel Jordan Kirkwood Bronze Vinnie Ream 1913 National Statuary Hall KS John James Ingalls Marble Charles Niehaus 1905 National Statuary Hall KS Dwight D. Eisenhower Bronze Jim Brothers 2003 Rotunda KY Henry Clay Bronze Charles Niehaus 1929 National Statuary Hall KY Ephraim McDowell Bronze Charles Niehaus 1929 Capitol Visitor Center LA Huey Pierce Long Bronze Charles Keck 1941 National Statuary Hall LA Edward Douglass White Bronze Arthur C. Morgan 1955 Capitol Visitor Center ME William King Marble Franklin Simmons 1878 House corridor, 2nd fl. ME Hannibal Hamlin Bronze Charles E. Tefft 1935 National Statuary Hall MD Charles Carroll Bronze Richard E. Brooks 1903 The Crypt MD John Hanson Bronze Richard E. Brooks 1903 Senate corridor, 2nd fl. MA Samuel Adams Marble Anne Whitney 1876 the Crypt MA John Winthrop Marble Richard S. Greenough 1876 Hall of Columns MI Lewis Cass Marble Daniel Chester French 1889 National Statuary Hall MI Gerald Ford Bronze J. Brett Gill 2011 Rotunda MI Zachariah Chandler* J. Brett Gill Marble Charles H. Niehaus 1913 Removed, replaced by Gerald Ford MN Henry Mower Rice Marble Frederick E. Triebel 1916 National Statuary Hall MN Maria L. Sanford Bronze Evelyn Raymond 1958 Capitol Visitor Center MS Jefferson Davis Bronze Augustus Lukeman 1931 National Statuary Hall MS James Z. George Bronze Augustus Lukeman 1931 Capitol Visitor Center MO Thomas Hart Benton Marble Alexander Doyle 1899 National Statuary Hall MO Francis Preston Blair, Jr. Marble Alexander Doyle 1899 Hall of Columns MT Charles Marion Russell Bronze John B. Weaver 1959 National Statuary Hall MT Jeannette Rankin Bronze Terry Minmaugh 1985 Capitol Visitor Center NE William Jennings Bryan Bronze Rudulph Evans 1937 National Statuary Hall NE J. Sterling Morton Bronze Rudulph Evans 1937 Capitol Visitor Center NV Patrick Anthony McCarran Bronze Yolande Jacobson 1960 Senate Wing, 2nd Floor NV Sarah Winnemucca Bronze Benjamin Victor 2005 Capitol Visitor Center NH John Stark Marble Carl Conrads 1894 The Crypt NH Daniel Webster Marble Carl Conrads (after Thomas Ball) 1894 National Statuary Hall NJ Philip Kearny Bronze Henry Kirke Brown 1888 Hall of Columns NJ Richard Stockton Marble Henry Kirke Brown (completed by
H. K. Bush-Brown)1888 The Crypt NM Dennis Chavez Bronze Felix W. de Weldon 1966 Senate Wing, 2nd Floor NM Po'pay Marble Cliff Fragua 2005 Capitol Visitor Center NY George Clinton Bronze Henry Kirke Brown 1873 Senate Wing, 2nd Floor NY Robert R. Livingston Bronze Erastus Dow Palmer 1875 the Crypt NC Zebulon Baird Vance Bronze Gutzon Borglum 1916 National Statuary Hall NC Charles Brantley Aycock Bronze Charles Keck 1932 Crypt ND John Burke Bronze Avard Fairbanks 1963 National Statuary Hall ND Sacagawea Bronze Arizona Bronze Atelier (after Leonard Crunelle, 1909) 2003 Capitol Visitor Center OH James A. Garfield Marble Charles Niehaus 1886 Rotunda OH William Allen Marble Charles Niehaus 1887 National Statuary Hall OK Sequoyah Bronze Vinnie Ream (completed by G. Julian Zolnay) 1917 National Statuary Hall OK Will Rogers Bronze Jo Davidson 1939 House corridor, 2nd fl. OR Jason Lee Bronze Gifford MacG. Proctor 1953 National Statuary Hall OR John McLoughlin Bronze Gifford MacG. Proctor 1953 Capitol Visitor Center PA Robert Fulton Marble Howard Roberts (sculptor) 1889 National Statuary Hall PA John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg Marble Blanche Nevin 1889 The Crypt RI Nathanael Greene Marble Henry Kirke Brown 1870 The Crypt RI Roger Williams Marble Franklin Simmons 1872 Senate corridor, 2nd fl. SC John C. Calhoun Marble Frederick Ruckstull 1910 The Crypt SC Wade Hampton Marble Frederick Ruckstull 1929 Capitol Visitor Center SD William Henry Harrison Beadle Bronze H. Daniel Webster 1938 National Statuary Hall SD Joseph Ward Marble Bruno Beghé 1963 Capitol Visitor Center TN Andrew Jackson Bronze Belle Kinney Scholz
and Leopold F. Scholz1928 Rotunda TN John Sevier Bronze Belle Kinney Scholz
and Leopold F. Scholz1931 National Statuary Hall TX Stephen F. Austin Marble Elisabet Ney 1905 Hall of Columns TX Sam Houston Marble Elisabet Ney 1905 National Statuary Hall UT Brigham Young Marble Mahonri Young 1950 National Statuary Hall UT Philo T. Farnsworth Bronze James R. Avati 1990 Capitol Visitor Center VT Ethan Allen Marble Larkin G. Mead 1876 National Statuary Hall VT Jacob Collamer Marble Preston Powers 1881 Senate Wing, 1st Floor VA Robert E. Lee Bronze Edward V. Valentine 1934 The Crypt VA George Washington Bronze Jean Antoine Houdon 1934 Rotunda WA Marcus Whitman Bronze Avard Fairbanks 1953 National Statuary Hall WA Mother Joseph Bronze Felix W. de Weldon 1980 Capitol Visitor Center WV John E. Kenna Marble Alexander Doyle 1901 Hall of Columns WV Francis Harrison Pierpont Marble Franklin Simmons 1910 National Statuary Hall WI Jacques Marquette Marble Gaetano Trentanove 1896 House corridor, 2nd Floor WI Robert M. La Follette, Sr. Marble Jo Davidson 1929 National Statuary Hall WY Esther Hobart Morris Bronze Avard Fairbanks 1960 Hall of Columns WY Washakie Bronze Dave McGary 2000 Capitol Visitor Center *Note: On August 31, 2006, the California Legislature approved a joint resolution to replace Thomas Starr King's statue in the National Statuary Hall Collection with a statue of Ronald Reagan. It was unveiled June 3, 2009. In 2007, the Michigan legislature approved a resolution to replace Zachariah Chandler's statue with Gerald Ford. It was unveiled May 3, 2011. [2]
Replacement of statues
A 2003 change in the law allows a state to remove a previously placed statue from the collection and replace it with another. Since this change, four states have replaced statues, and a two others are in the process of doing so:
- Kansas replaced its statue of George Glick with one of Dwight D. Eisenhower in 2003.[3] The Glick statue now resides at Kansas State Historical Society in Topeka. Currently Kansas has plans to replace John James Ingalls with Amelia Earhart.[4]
- California replaced its statue of Thomas Starr King with one of Ronald Reagan in 2009. The King statue now stands in the California State Capitol building in Sacramento."[5]
- Alabama replaced its statue of Jabez Curry with one of Helen Keller. The Curry statue now resides at Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama.
- Michigan replaced its statue of Zachariah Chandler with one of Gerald Ford.[6]
- Ohio is replacing its statue of William Allen. A panel recommended Thomas Edison to be the subject after a public vote.[7]
- Iowa is replacing its statue of James Harlan with one of Norman Borlaug, who is considered the founder of the Green Revolution.[8]
Sculptor Charles Niehaus has more sculptures in the collection (seven) than any other artist. If his Chandler statue is replaced, Niehaus's six remaining statues will still hold the record.
References
- ^ "National Statuary Hall Collection - Helen Keller". Architect of the Capitol. December 4, 2010. http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/keller.cfm. Retrieved 2010-12-04.
- ^ http://content.usatoday.com/communities/onpolitics/post/2011/05/gerald-ford-statue-dedicated-us-capitol-/1
- ^ http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/eisenhower.cfm
- ^ Amelia's monument about to take flight
- ^ http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/reagan.cfm
- ^ http://www.newstribune.com/articles/2008/12/01/news_state/031state13ford.txt
- ^ Associated Press (2010-08-26). "Panel recommends Thomas Edison statue go in U.S. Capitol". The Plain Dealer. http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/08/panel_recommends_thomas_edison.html. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
- ^ http://www.iowafarmer.com/articles/2011/04/18/top_stories/20borlaug.txt
External links
Categories:- United States Capitol
- Sculptures in the United States
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