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The base's front also includes a plaque with a signed founder's mark and the text: DOUGHBOY STATUE REDEDICATION / MAY 18, 1991 / BARBARA ROBERTS / GOVERNOR / JON MANGIS / DIRECTOR, DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS' AFFAIRS / ORVILLE A. RUMMELL / PAST COMMANDER / VETERAN WORLD WAR. Displayed on the other three sides of the base are the names of 87 men and ...
Monument to the Women of the South (1911), 688 Poplar Street, Macon, Georgia. [24] Same design with different details; Sedgwick County Soldier's and Sailor's Monument (1911–1913), Wichita, Kansas; Spirit of the American Doughboy (1920–1921) The Infantry Trophy (1923), created for the U.S. Infantry Association [25] Imp-O-Luck (1923 ...
The concrete, Spanish Revival monument designed by Charles T. Diamond was constructed in 1926, [2] incorporating a cast of a sculpture by John Paulding. [3] The structure was recognized individually by the National Register of Historic Places in 1984 and as part of the Uniontown–Alameda Historic District in 1988.
The Spirit of the American Doughboy is a pressed copper sculpture by E. M. Viquesney, designed to honor the veterans and casualties of World War I. Mass-produced during the 1920s and 1930s for communities throughout the United States, the statue's design was the most popular of its kind, spawning a wave of collectible miniatures and related ...
American Doughboy Bringing Home Victory, also known as Armistice [1] and Spirit of the American Doughboy, [1] is an outdoor 1932 bronze sculpture and war memorial by Alonzo Victor Lewis. The statue is 12.0 feet (3.7 m) tall and weighs 4,600 pounds (2,100 kg).
In the first three years after his 'birth,' Pillsbury reports that the Doughboy had an 87 percent recognition factor among consumers. At one point, the company says that the Doughboy was even ...
Notable buildings include the Overholt General Store (c. 1860), a harness shop (c. 1870), a warehouse (c. 1880), the East End Hotel (c. 1885), the Grand Central Hotel (c. 1895), the Gerechter Furniture Building (c. 1905), the Citizens Savings and Trust Company and First National Bank (1905), the Shupe Steam Grist Mill (1843), City Hall (1910 ...
Mount Pleasant (cricket ground), a cricket ground in Batley, Yorkshire; Mount Pleasant (mansion), a mansion located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Mount Pleasant, Sheffield, an 18th-century mansion in Sheffield, England; Mount Pleasant Caldera, a volcano in southwestern New Brunswick, Canada; Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto, Ontario