• Source: Smith Memorial Arch
    • Smith Memorial Arch is an American Civil War monument at South Concourse and Lansdowne Drive in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Built on the former grounds of the 1876 Centennial Exposition, it serves as a gateway to West Fairmount Park. The Memorial consists of two colossal columns supported by curving, neo-Baroque arches, and adorned with 13 individual portrait sculptures (two equestrians, three figures, and eight busts); two eagles standing on globes; and architectural reliefs of eight allegorical figures.


      History


      In 1891, Richard Smith (1821-1894), a wealthy Philadelphia electroplate and type founder, wrote a will that provided $500,000 ($17 million today) for a memorial arch to be adorned with portraits of Pennsylvania's Civil War military and naval heroes. Smith deposited the model and designs for the memorial with the Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company and stipulated that: Fidelity president John B. Gest handle his request, that the architectural designs and construction be handled by Philadelphia architect James H. Windrim, and that the selection and supervision of sculptors for the specified portraits should be handled by the Fairmount Park Art Association (now the Association for Public Art).
      These provisions of the will went into effect upon the death of Smith's wife in 1895. Two years later, the Fairmount Park Art Association began to select the sculptors. The initial commissions were awarded on May 8, 1898, and the final sculpture was installed in 1912.
      The estate of Richard and Sarah Smith also funded the creation of Smith Memorial Playground & Playhouse, in East Fairmount Park.


      Sculpture




      = Statues

      =

      Major General George Gordon Meade by Daniel Chester French (atop south column).
      Major General John Fulton Reynolds by Charles Grafly (atop north column).
      Richard Smith (donor of the Memorial) by Herbert Adams (on pedestal of north column).


      = Equestrian statues

      =
      Major General George B. McClellan by Edward Clark Potter (atop south pier).
      Major General Winfield Scott Hancock by John Quincy Adams Ward (atop north pier).


      = Busts

      =
      Major General John F. Hartranft by Alexander Stirling Calder.
      Major General Samuel W. Crawford by Bessie Potter Vonnoh.
      General James Addams Beaver by Katherine M. Cohen.
      Admiral David Dixon Porter by Charles Grafly.
      Admiral John A. B. Dahlgren by George Bissell.
      Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin by Moses Jacob Ezekiel.
      James H. Windrim (architect of the Memorial) by Samuel Murray.
      John B. Gest (executor of Richard Smith's estate) by Charles Grafly.


      = Other sculpture

      =
      Two eagles standing on globes by John Massey Rhind.
      Eight bas-relief allegorical figures such as Courage and Heroism, also by Rhind
      The Memorial's frieze is carved with the names of 84 Pennsylvania veterans.
      The Memorial's inscription reads:

      THIS
      MONUMENTAL MEMORIAL
      PRESENTED BY
      RICHARD SMITH
      TYPE FOUNDER
      OF PHILADELPHIA –
      IN MEMORY OF
      PENNSYLVANIANS WHO
      TOOK PART IN THE CIVIL WAR
      THEIR STRIFE WAS NOT FOR
      AGGRANDIZEMENT AND WHEN
      CONFLICT CEASED THE NORTH
      WITH THE SOUTH UNITED AGAIN
      TO ENJOY THE COMMON HERITAGE
      LEFT BY THE FATHERS OF OUR
      COUNTRY RESOLVING THAT
      THEREAFTER ALL OUR PEOPLE
      SHOULD DWELL TOGETHER

      IN UNITY.


      References




      Sources


      Fairmount Park Art Association, Sculpture of a City: Philadelphia's Treasures in Bronze and Stone (New York: Walker Publishing Company, 1974), pp. 168–179.
      Penny Balkin Bach, Public Art in Philadelphia (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1992), p. 208.


      External links



      Smith Memorial Arch, from Philadelphia Public Art
      Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. PA-1666, "Smith Memorial Arch, Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA", 15 photos, 1 color transparency, 4 photo caption pages
      Smith Memorial Arch, from Smithsonian Institution Research Information System
      Smith Memorial Arch, from Association for Public Art

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