Washington, D.C. - Landmarks and Points of Interest
- By Smithsonian.com
- Smithsonian.com, November 06, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
In 1876, the country celebrated its centennial with an unfinished monument to its first president. Later that year, President Ulysses S. Grant approved funds to complete the project according to Mills’s modified design. By 1884, the monument had grown to 500 feet. The marble used for the remaining 48 feet had weathered to a different stage, which can still be noted.
A pyramid-shaped apex, crafted from aluminum (which was highly valuable at the time) was placed atop the obelisk. The monument was dedicated by President Chester A. Arthur, and was opened to the public on October 9, 1888.
In 1959, 50 flagpoles were installed, representing each state, encircling the perimeter of the monument.
Lincoln Memorial
(23rd St. and Constitution Ave., NW; Dedicated: 1922; Architect: Henry Bacon; Sculptor: Daniel Chester French)
One of Washington, D.C.’s most familiar landmarks honors its 16th president, Abraham Lincoln. The movement to create a memorial to Lincoln began shortly after Lincoln’s assassination. The Lincoln Monument Association was established by Congress in 1867, but the site for the memorial was not selected until 1901. The public was outraged by the selection of West Potomac Park—marshy land that had originally been under the Potomac River.
Architect Henry Bacon submitted his final plans for the Greek temple design that would soon become one of Washington, D.C.’s most familiar sites in 1913. Ground was broken in 1914. The Lincoln statue was sculpted by Daniel Chester French, the chairman of the Commission of Fine Arts.
French opted to portray Lincoln seated, a symbol of mental and physical strength. French planned to create a ten-foot statue but found his statue dwarfed by the huge memorial and doubled its size.
Above the temple’s 38 columns are the names of the 36 states that were in the Union at the time of Lincoln’s death in 1865. Murals sculpted by Jules Guerin adorn the temple’s inner walls. Emancipation is on the south wall and hangs above the inscription of the Gettysburg Address. Unification is on the north wall, above Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address.
The Lincoln Memorial was dedicated on Memorial Day, May 30, 1922, by Supreme Court Chief Justice William Howard Taft. During the dedication ceremony, African-Americans in attendance were made to sit in segregated seating sections. The memorial would later become the backdrop for milestones in the struggle for civil rights, such as Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech and a concert by black singer Marian Anderson, who was denied the right to perform at Constitution Hall.
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Comments (2)
Do you have pictures of 4 story earth constructed on the Mall April 22, 1995
Posted by Jo Ellen Johnson on August 2,2012 | 06:05 PM
Do you have any pictures of the 4 Story Earth that was constucted on the mall April 1995. I took students there to help build the earth raised by bicycle power. Thanks
Posted by Jo Ellen Johnson on March 23,2010 | 12:17 AM