Digital Collections -> Pathfinders -> Many Roads to Freedom -> Local Monuments and Historical Markers -> Public Monuments | ||||||||
MANY ROADS TO FREEDOM: |
||||||||
The Soldiers' and Sailors'
Monument
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Scenes of the Dedication of the Monument |
||||||||
|
||||||||
The Soldiers and
Sailors Monument was designed by Leonard Wells Volk. It is a monument to
Civil War soldiers and to President Abraham Lincoln, who is depicted on
the large central column of the monument (it has also been referred to as
the Lincoln Monument). When the monument was unveiled on Memorial Day of
1892, a group of about 30 dignitaries, including President Benjamin
Harrison and Frederick Douglass, attended. "To those who faithful
unto death gave their lives for their country: 1861-1865" |
||||||||
More Views of the Monument |
||||||||
The Frederick Douglass Monument | ||||||||
|
||||||||
Sculptor: Sidney W. Edwards Location: 1899-1941: Central Avenue and St. Paul Street (near the New York Central Railroad Station); 1941-present: Highland Park (near the site of the Douglass home which burned in 1872) Date of the laying of the cornerstone: July 20, 1898 Date of unveiling: June 9, 1899 |
||||||||
The monument section was made by Smith Granite Company of Westerly, Rhode Island. The model for the bronze statue was made in spring of 1898. Douglass' son Charles R. Douglass was the model for the statue. The following description is from pages 156-157 of An Authentic History of the Douglass Monument by John W. Thompson. This book has a complete description of the Douglass funeral in Rochester and the building of the monument. |
||||||||
You may read the entire book
here: An Authentic History of the Douglass Monument [pdf, 13.8 MB]
For pdf help, click
here |
||||||||
|
||||||||
Gallery of Individuals Involved with the Douglass Monument | ||||||||
|