Second Division Memorial
Public artwork by James Earle Fraser in Washington, DC
38°53′33″N 77°02′17″W / 38.8925798°N 77.0379715°W / 38.8925798; -77.0379715The Second Division Memorial is located in President's Park, between 17th Street Northwest and Constitution Avenue in Washington, DC, United States.
The Memorial commemorates those who died, while serving in the 2nd Infantry Division of the U. S. Army.[1][2] The artist was James Earle Fraser.[3] It was dedicated on July 18, 1936, by president Franklin D. Roosevelt.[4]
It was rededicated in 1962, by Gen. Maxwell Taylor, with two wings added for the battle honors of World War II and the Korean War.
The flaming sword symbolizes the defense of Paris from the German advance.[4]
See also
References
- ^ "Second Division Memorial", National Park Service
- ^ "Monument Monday – The Second Infantry Division" Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, DC Traveler
- ^ "Army, Second Division Memorial", DC Memorials. Archived 2007-03-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b "Second Division Memorial, (sculpture)". siris-artinventories.si.edu. Retrieved 2023-11-21.
External links
- Second Infantry Division Memorial, Hmdb.org
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James Earle Fraser
- Benjamin Franklin National Memorial (1906–1911)
- Frederick Keep Monument (1911)
- End of the Trail (1915)
- Alexander Hamilton (1923)
- John Ericsson National Memorial (1926)
- Lincoln the Mystic (1930)
- Guardianship (1935)
- Heritage (1935)
- Second Division Memorial (1936)
- Equestrian Statue of Theodore Roosevelt (1939)
- Albert Gallatin (1947)
- Harvey S. Firestone Memorial (1950)
- General George S. Patton, Jr. (1951)
- The Arts of Peace (Music and Harvest, Aspiration and Literature) (1951)
- Buffalo nickel (1913)
- World War I Victory Medal (United States) (1919)
- Navy Cross (1919)
- Norse-American medal (1925)
- Oregon Trail Memorial half dollar (1926)
- Laura Gardin Fraser (wife)
- American Buffalo silver dollar (2001)
- American Buffalo coin (2006)
- National Sculpture Society