- GAR Monument in Covington
Infobox_nrhp | name =GAR Monument in Covington
nrhp_type =
caption = North side of monument
location=Covington, Kentucky
lat_degrees = 39
lat_minutes = 4
lat_seconds = 23
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 84
long_minutes = 30
long_seconds = 53
long_direction = W
locmapin = Kentucky
area =
built =1929
architect=
architecture= No Style Listed
added =July 17 ,1997
governing_body = Local
mpsub=Civil War Monuments of Kentucky MPS
refnum=97000684cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service] The Grand Army of the Republic Monument, in theLinden Grove Cemetery ofCovington, Kentucky , was built in 1929 by the O. P. Sine of Garfield Post No. 2 of theGrand Army of the Republic , a group comprised of the remaining veterans of theUnion army .This was the second memorial built by the Grand Army of the Republic in the commonwealth of
Kentucky , with the first being built in Kentucky's capital city ofFrankfort, Kentucky , theColored Soldiers Monument in Frankfort . Most GAR monuments are built in courthouse squares, but both in Kentucky are in cemeteries.citation|title=PDFlink| [http://www.nr.nps.gov/multiples/64500229.pdf National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Submission: Civil War Monuments in Kentucky, 1865-1935] |1.81 MiB |date=January 8, 1997 |author=Brent, Joseph E. |publisher=National Park Service pp.E-13] By the time interest in building such memorials to the Civil War had waned; most G.A.R. had been built long before Covington's. It is the only monument related to the war in Kentucky shaped like asarcophagus . It measures three feet high, three feet tall, and is ten feet long. It is made ofconcrete , and was painted white. [http://www.trailsrus.com/monuments/reg4/covington.html Civil War in Kentucky ] ] [http://www.kentonlibrary.org/genealogy/register/GARmonument.pdf]Most monuments to the War in Kentucky were made to honor Confederate soldiers/veterans/memories. Though many regions in the state were pro-Union during the war, by Reconstruction
Kenton County, Kentucky was one of the few places in Kentucky where sentiment was still decidedly pro-Union, which is why the Grand Army of the Republic chose Covington in particular for this monument.On July 17, 1997, it was one of sixty different monuments to the Civil War in Kentucky placed on the
National Register of Historic Places , as part of the Civil War Monuments of KentuckyMultiple Property Submission . It is a few feet from theVeteran's Monument in Covington , which was also on the same MPS, but was built four years after the G.A.R. Monument was.References
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