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Tag: dc memorials

  • Missing centerpiece to WWI Memorial weeks away from unveiling – WTOP News

    Missing centerpiece to WWI Memorial weeks away from unveiling – WTOP News

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    The largest freestanding bronze relief statue in the Western Hemisphere is nearing completion at the World War I Memorial in Downtown D.C.

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    What to expect from DC’s brand new WWI Memorial

    The largest freestanding bronze relief statue in the Western Hemisphere is nearing completion at the World War I Memorial in downtown D.C. The centerpiece of the memorial has been a decade in the making.

    “I was speechless, and I’m not speechless very often. And I had been looking at it for 10 years, I knew what it looked like. I was there with the early designs,” Dan Dayton, chairman and CEO of the Doughboy Foundation, told WTOP about the nearly finished project.

    The final large pieces of the 58-foot-6-inch long statue were brought into the memorial by crane over the weekend. Most of the memorial is now closed off as crews begin to weld them together to make the final statue, titled “The Soldier’s Journey.”

    The piece, created by sculptor Sabin Howard, depicts a soldier through his entire journey during the war, from leaving home, to going into battle and returning to a young daughter.

    “It is the story of a soldier and the story of the nation at a remarkable period of our time, when the entire country was united to a single goal,” said Dayton, whose organization has been instrumental in securing the entire memorial near the White House east entrance.

    “We want to make sure that everyone who visits gets an idea and a concept about what World War I was, how important it was and the lessons we can learn from that,” he said.

    Dayton said it includes every aspect of the people who sacrificed during the First World War, including Black and Native American soldiers who served, as well as the nurses who took care of the wounded and the families that had to say goodbye to their loved ones.

    The memorial initially opened in April 2021 in Pershing Park, but it was missing its final centerpiece until now.

    That centerpiece is now wrapped in black plastic ready to be viewed by the thousands who come to the memorial every year.

    The first illumination of the statue will take place Sept. 13 at 7:15 p.m. The public is welcome and Dayton said they will have musical performances, re-enactors and even World War I vehicles at the memorial for the unveiling.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Luke Lukert

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  • New names added to list of fallen officers at DC memorial
 – WTOP News

    New names added to list of fallen officers at DC memorial
 – WTOP News

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    Engravers began adding 282 names of officers who died in the line of duty to the National Law Enforcement Memorial Wall. They will be the last added to the original downtown D.C. memorial.

    Bill Alexander, CEO of The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, and Anne Arundel County police Chief Amal Awad look at the names to be added on the memorial.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Engravers began adding 282 names on Monday of officers who died in the line of duty to the National Law Enforcement Memorial Wall.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    engraver adds names to memorial
    A worker engraves new names into the National Law Enforcement Memorial Wall in downtown D.C.
    (WTOP/Luke Lukert)

    WTOP/Luke Lukert

    Engravers began adding 282 names on Monday of officers who died in the line of duty to the National Law Enforcement Memorial Wall. They will be the last added to the original walls at the downtown D.C. memorial.

    “Surrounding us right now, on what we view are very sacred walls, are 23,785 names, the names of all of the men and women across the broad stretch of U.S. history, the men and women in law enforcement who have died in the line of duty,” said Bill Alexander, CEO of The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, during a short ceremony before the engraving process began.

    The wall was built in 1991 and the names being sandblasted into it Monday will be the last added to the original memorial. At the time of its construction, builders thought it would hold enough names to last until 2100.

    “It’s absolutely staggering to think about the ongoing costs in terms of preserving our democracy, trying to prevent chaos, trying to prevent crime on our streets to allow men and women to go about their lives and feel safe,” Alexander told WTOP. “The cost of that for our country every single year, unfortunately, is hundreds of lives.”

    Anne Arundel County Police Chief Amal Awad was on hand to watch the work begin.

    “I have brothers whose names are listed on this wall. This place means something to me. And I try to pay my respects to our fallen heroes as often as I can,” she told WTOP.

    “When you walk through this memorial, you feel it, you feel the energy, you feel the grief, you feel the loss, you feel the pain, the hurt.”

    The engraving of all 282 names could take weeks to complete.

    Next month, as part of police week, those 282 names will be read out loud at a candlelight vigil on the National Mall.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Luke Lukert

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