Navy and Marine Memorial
The Navy and Marine Memorial, is a monument honoring sailors of the United States Navy, Coast Guard, the United States Merchant Marine, the NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps and others who died at sea during World War I and other times. It is located in the George Washington Memorial Parkway in Lady Bird Johnson Park on Columbia Island in Washington, D.C.[3]
Nicknamed "Waves and Gulls," the memorial depicts seven seagulls above the crest of a wave. It is cast from aluminum and the base is made of green granite from New Hampshire.
The memorial reads:
To the strong souls and ready valor of those men of the United States who in the Navy, the Merchant Marine, and other paths of Activity upon the waters of the world have given life or still offer it in the performance of heroic deeds this monument is dedicated by a grateful people.
History
[edit]Following the end of World War I, the Navy and Marine Memorial Association formed for the purpose of establishing a monument to who lost their life at sea during the war. Retired Navy Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fiske chaired the Executive Committee of the Association. The Committee had several prominent members including Charles Francis Adams then Secretary of the Navy, Dwight F. Davis former Secretary of War, James J. Davis former Secretary of Labor, Curtis F. Wilbur former Secretary of the Navy, Andrew W. Mellon former Secretary of the Treasury, Hubert Work former Secretary of the Interior, Rear Admiral Benson, Admiral Edward W. Eberle, Rear Admiral F.C. Ballard, T.B. O'Connor and Major John A. Lejeune.[4]
The Association raised funds from several prominent individuals including Richard F. White of New York who contributed $7,500, Col Robert M. Thompson to contributed $5,500, Vincent J. Astor who contributed $5,000, William H. Vanderbilt who contributed $5,000 and J. Pierpont Morgan who contributed $2,750.[4] Fundraising included campaigns to raise funds from school children.[5]
The Memorial Association selected Harvey Wiley Corbett for the architectural design of the monument and Ernesto Begni del Piatta as the sculptor. The Association estimated the monument would cost $500,000.[6] In 1924, Congress passed S.J. 86 authorizing placement of a monument on public grounds in Washington D.C. with the condition that the location and design be approved by the National Commission of Fine Arts and that the federal government was not required to pay for creation or maintenance of the monument.[7]
Corbett submitted a design to the National Commission of Fine Arts in March 2024 of a memorial that would be 30 feet high and 32 feet long at the base with steps that would extend 200 feet and include memorial plaques. Del Piatta's sculpture would feature 7 seagulls with 5 foot wingspans soaring over a crashing wave. Corbett requested that the monument be placed at the tip of Hains Point.[8][9]
The Commission of Fine Arts expressed doubts that the monument would be interesting at full scale and that the sculpture was overly romantic. The Memorial Association submitted a modified design on December 10th, 1925 with the Commission of Fine Arts providing feedback in January 1926 that:
- It could not be sited at Hains Point because the sculpture was not interesting from all four sides for river traffic
- It was still too romantic and not monumental enough to be executed on a large scale
- It had an architectural setting that was too elaborate for the sculpture
- It would be better suited for a site on East Potomac Park near a planned canal on the Potomac side
An agreement was made during the meeting that the monument would be reduced by 25% in size and that it would be sited on the Potomac River in East Potomac Park.[10]
The Commission of Fine Arts approved a monument site on the southeast corner of Columbia Island on November 10th, 1930.[11] A ground breaking ceremony was held on December 3, 1930 with Navy Secretary Charles Francis Adams turning the first shovel at the selected site on the southeast corner of Columbia Island.[12] Further ground work was delayed by the construction of the nearby George Washington Memorial Parkway.[11]
The sculpture was cast in aluminum in an Aluminum Company of America foundry in Cleveland. By the time casting was completed, the Association had run out of funds and could not pay the approximately $18,000 due to ALCOA. Congressman Sol Bloom of New York negotiated an agreement to settle the outstanding balance for $13,000.[4] Congress passed House Joint Resolution 342 in 1934, providing $13,000 to ship and install the monument on a temporary base.[13] The ground was broken on the memorial in 1930, with the foundation completed the following year and it was installed on October 18, 1934, but work on the base and landscaping was postponed due to lack of funding.[14][15][16]
A dedication ceremony was held on May 30, 1935.[17] Congress passed H.R. 3234 in 1939 which authorized $100,000 which included $5,000 for unpaid architect fees, $44,384 in unpaid sculptor fees to del Piatta, and the remainder for NPS to construct a finished base for the monument. The authorization required worked to be completed within a year.[18] During a Deficiency Hearing to consider appropriation of the $100,000 NPS Assistant Director Arthur E. Demaray was not able to provide a great degree of detail on the need for the appropriation in response to questions about previous expenditures. His testimony ended with the conclusion that if Congress did not appropriate funds that "we would not have this very difficult job thrust upon us."[19] Congress failed to appropriate the funding, however and took up the issue in the appropriations for 1941.[20] Work began anew the following September, and was completed by the end of 1939.[21] Del Piatta died before it could be completed.[22]
Congress did not appropriate funding to implement the original vision of sea-green granite steps surrounding the monument. The rough concrete base was instead finished with flagstone by the Civilian Conservation Corps under the Works Progress Administration who also installed landscaping, a parking lot and walking paths. Work was somewhat delayed by a shortage of labor caused by America's entry into World War II.[23]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Beretta, J. W. (1936). "Aluminum Heralds a New Age". The Military Engineer. 28 (159): 196–197. ISSN 0026-3982.
- ^ Arts, United States Commission of Fine (1926). Report. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ McLean, Mailing Address: George Washington Memorial Parkway Headquarters 700 George Washington Memorial Parkway; Us, VA 22101 Phone: 703 289-2500 Contact. "Navy and Marine Memorial - George Washington Memorial Parkway (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c Appropriations, United States Congress House Committee on (1935). Second Deficiency Appropriation Bill for 1935: Hearing Before the Subcommittee of House Committee on Appropriations in Charge of Deficiency Appropriations. Seventy-fourth Congress, First Session. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ America. America Press. 1925.
- ^ Manufacturers Record. Conway Publications. 1926.
- ^ "Joint Resolution Authorizing the erection on public grounds in the city of Washington, District of Columbia, of a memorial to the Navy and marine services, to be known as Navy and Marine Memorial Dedicated to Americans Lost at Sea" (PDF). February 16, 1924. Retrieved January 25, 2025.
- ^ Arts, United States Commission of Fine (1926). Report. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ Institute, United States Naval (1924). Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute. The Institute.
- ^ Arts, United States Commission of Fine (1926). Report. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ a b Capital, United States Office of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National (1932). Report.
- ^ Caemmerer, Hans Paul (1932). Washington, the National Capital. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ "House Joint Resolution 342 JOINT RESOLUTION Authorizing an appropriation to defray the expense of erecting the completed Navy and Marine Memorial Monument" (PDF). June 26, 1934. Retrieved January 26, 2025.
- ^ "WPA Funds Sought For Sea Memorial". The Washington Post. 10 May 1936.
- ^ "Marine Memorial Dedication Put Off". The Washington Post. 27 October 1934.
- ^ "Years Pass as Capital 'Forgets' Unfinished Navy Marine Shaft". The Washington Post. 6 November 1938.
- ^ "Marine Memorial Dedication Soon". The Evening Star. 21 May 1935.
- ^ "H.R. 3234: AN ACT To provide for the completion of the Navy and Marine Memorial" (PDF). April 26, 1934. Retrieved January 26, 2025.
- ^ Appropriations, United States Congress House Committee on (1939). First Deficiency Appropriation Bill for 1939: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Seventy-sixth Congress, First Session, on the First Deficiency Appropriation Bill for 1939. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ Senate, United States Congress (1940). Hearings. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- ^ "Final Work to Begin On Marine Memorial". The Washington Post. 7 September 1940.
- ^ "Sculptor Dies Grieving Over Unfinished Memorial". The Washington Post. 24 December 1939.
- ^ Service, United States National Park (1940). Annual Report of the Director of the National Park Service to the Secretary of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended ... and the Travel Season. U.S. Government Printing Office.
- Gearheart, Nicole (August 28, 1998). "Monument dedicated to sailors, Marines". Pentagram. Archived from the original on April 12, 2005. Retrieved 2006-03-31.
External links
[edit]- Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. VA-69, "George Washington Memorial Parkway, Along Potomac River from McLean to Mount Vernon, VA, Mount Vernon, Fairfax County, VA" includes Navy – Merchant Marine Memorial
- World War I memorials in the United States
- Monuments and memorials in Washington, D.C.
- Military monuments and memorials in the United States
- United States Merchant Marine
- United States Navy
- Outdoor sculptures in Washington, D.C.
- 1934 establishments in Washington, D.C.
- Aluminum sculptures in Washington, D.C.
- 1934 sculptures
- George Washington Memorial Parkway
- Historic American Engineering Record in Virginia
- Naval monuments and memorials
- National Park Service areas in Washington, D.C.