| Built: |
1914-1922
|
| Designed
by: |
Henry
Bacon |
| Type: |
Monument |
| Location: |
West
Potomac Park, at 23rd Street, Northwest |
T
The
Lincoln Memorial
Built:
Designed by
This
is probably the most recognizable memorial on the
National Mall, not because of its grandeur, but because
its image is embossed on the back of countless millions
of pennies, complete with a tiny figure of the Lincoln
statue. The monument is much larger than its monetary
representation may project. It is 190 feet long, 119
feet wide, and 99 feet tall. It is one of several
neoclassical monuments modeled after the great temples
of Greece and Italy. In this case, the homage is paid
through the use of Doric columns. There are 36 of
them, one for each state in the Union at the time
of President Lincoln's death, plus two more flanking
the entrance. The names of those states are carved
into the frieze above the columns. They are topped
by another list of the 48 states in the Union at the
time the memorial was constructed.
This is a far cry from the original plans for the
Memorial from 1867. They called for a series of 37
statues (31 people, plus six on horseback) and a 12-foot
statue of Lincoln at the center. This was never built
due to a lack of funds. Another plan, cooked up by
congressman James McCleary of Minnesota,
was for the memorial to take the form of a freeway
from Washington, D.C. to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
He thought each state should erect its own monument
to the late president along the route. The Commission
of Fine Arts wanted to see a portico built with a
marble slab engraved with Lincoln's famous Gettysburg
Address. It was 44 years before Congress finally came
up with the money to honor one of the country's most
cherished leaders.
- The
statue of Abraham Lincoln by Daniel Chester French
took four years to carve.
- It
is 19-feet tall, and weighs 175 tons.
- The
exterior of the monument is made from Colorado Yule
marble.
-
The columns and interior are Indiana limestone.
- The
floor is Tennessee Pink marble.
- The
ceiling is Alabama marble soaked in paraffin to
make it translucent.
- The
Lincoln statue is White Georgia marble.
- The
statue's base is Tennessee marble.
- The
walkway is of Massachusetts granite and stones from
the nearby Potomac River.
- 25
July, 2003 - The National Parks Service carves an
inscription of the memorial steps marking the location
where in 1963 Martin Luther King, Junior made his
"I Have A Dream" speech.
|
|
Photograph
from the Washington Convention and Visitors Association
|
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