The bronze sculpture installed and unveiled this month in DC is glorious. Here are three reasons why.
Photo courtesy of the National Park Service
A Testament to the Human Experience
This large sculpture is located at the National World War I Memorial, just across the street from the White House. The narrative bronze art captures the…
A sixty-foot-long bronze sculpture with 38 figures is going up here in downtown Washington, DC.
Sculptor Sabin Howard focuses on the journey of a WWI survivor in his developing, monumental sculpture. Set in Pershing Park, next to the White House, it will reimagine our WWI memorial.
People gravitate to sculpted human figures, not stark, theoretical…
One hundred and seven years ago, we entered WWI when Congress declared war on Germany.
The terrible effects of this war resulted in the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. It also gave us the DC War Memorial built by local Washington DC residents to honor local casualties.
Now, a new monument…
When the guns of WWI fell silent on November 11, 1918, these United States of America had been at war for just one year.
Some local soldiers didn't return to victory parades. Only their names appeared, carved on the DC War Memorial.
The WWI Memorial in DC
John Francis Moriarty enlisted in the Navy. He was…