List of statues, monuments, and war memorials

From Cvillepedia
Revision as of 15:04, 23 March 2016 by Polonius (talk | contribs) (fix intro)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The following derives from a list maintained by the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society. It omits sculptures placed by Art In Place, which are usually temporary exihibits of modern abstract sculptures not figurative or representative.

Name Artist Date erected Place Description
Memorial to General Ashby Casper Buberl, George Julian Zolney 1893 University of Virginia Cemetery effigy of bareheaded soldier standing on pedestal holding musket with fixed bayonet (dedicated to General Ashby but whether it actually depicts him is unclear); bronze tablets naming 1,097 Civil War dead, most of whom died of wounds or illness in Charlottesville hospitals and are buried in cemetery
Confederate Monument ? 1909 Court Square, 5t St. and Jefferson confederate soldier leaning on musket facing south; inscriptions about valor; two bronze cannons and cannonballs
Thomas Jonathan Jackson Charles Keck 1924 Jackson park, 4th St. and Jefferson General Jackson mounted on his horse Sorrel; granite pedestal with sculpted figures representing Valor and Faith; names of battles, donated to the city with the surrounding park specifically as a site for the statue by Paul Goodloe McIntire
The Aviator Gutzon Borglum 1919 U VA Grounds between Alderman and Clemons libraries bronze life sized male nude figure of Icarus about to take flight, commissioned in honor of University alumnus, James Rogers McConnell’s heroism and courage in World War I as a member of the Lafayette Escadrille.
Thomas Jefferson Moses Jacob Ezekial 1908 UVA Rotunda north side Thomas Jefferson standing on a liberty bell, surrounded by four allegorical figures in high relief; the sculptor Moses Ezekial was one of the VMI Keydets who fought at New Market
Thomas Jefferson ? ? UVA West lawn, south of Pavilion IX Jefferson standing
Thomas Jefferson ? ? UVA north grounds’ law school Jefferson standing
George Rodgers Clark Charles Keck 1921 Intersection of Jefferson Park Avenue and Main streets Donated by Paul Goodloe Mcintyre to the University of Virginia; listed in the Virginia Landmarks Register and National Register of Historic Places
Lewis & Clark (and Sacagewea) Charles Keck 1918 Intersection of Ridge Street and Main streets Donated by Paul Goodloe Mcintire to the city, to face west on the colonial Three Chopt Road. The design originally showed only Lewis and Clark but Keck on his own initiative included the figure of Sacagewea (and called her "the best of the lot"). Reliefs surrounding the statue show scenes from the expedition, including a depiction of the slave York. In 2009 the city added a bronze plaque explaining that Sacagawea is pathfinding, not crouching in subservience.
George Washington Jean Houdon 1913 U Va East Lawn, South of Pavillion X One of 33 bronze copies made of a 1796 original in marble commissioned by Thomas Jefferson from Jean Houdon; the original now stands in the Virginia capital in Richmond
Homer Moses Jacob Ezekial 1907 U Va South end of Lawn in front of Cabell Hall seated blind Homer educating nude young man seated at his feet, said to be his guide
Robert Edward Lee Leo Lentelli 1924 Lee Park, Market St. between 2nd and 3rd General Lee seated on his horse Traveller, donated to the city with the surrounding park specifically as a site for the statue by Paul Goodloe McIntire
St. Thomas Aquinas Henry Mascotte 1980's St. Thomas Aquinas Church St. Thomas Aquuinas seated with hands resting on knees, steel modern sculpture made of welded automobile bumpers on a concrete base, commissioned by Father Thomas Stickle, pastor of St. Thomas in the early 1980s.
Paul Goodloe McIntire ? ? Albemarle Charlotesville Historical society garden bust of philanthropist Paul Goodloe McIntire, who made many gifts of parks and artwork to Charlottesville, and scholarships and buildings to it schools and to the University of Virginia, giving away a great deal of his considerable fortune. The historical society building bears his name.