Tag Archive: memorial

VE-Day Memorial American Flags – Utah

VE-Day Memorial American Flags - Utah

A field of American flags flying on a warm summer day in West Jordan, Utah. This was a celebration of VE-day (Victory in Europe Day during World War 2 (WWII). But it could just as easily have been from Memorial Day or Veterans Day. A common sight across the United States on those special days when we honor the sacrifice of military veterans during their service in war and peace.

Confederate Monument – Frankfort Cemetery – Kentucky

Confederate Monument - Frankfort Cemetery - Kentucky

Surrounded by the graves of 68 Confederate soldiers, the Confederate Monument to the American Civil War resides in the hills above the state’s capitol in Kentucky. The monument was erected in 1892 by the Daughters of the Confederacy. The monument’s primary inscription reads;

“Our Confederate Dead
1861–1865
They sleep—what need to question now
if they were right or wrong:
They know ere this whose cause was
just in God the Father’s sight
They wield no warlike weapons now
return no foeman’s thrust
Who but a coward would revile
an honored soldier’s dust.”

Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park Memorial Building – Hodgenville – Kentucky

Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park Memorial Building - Hodgenville - Kentucky

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The memorial that would eventually become the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park was established in 1909 by the Lincoln Farm Association, with the laying of the cornerstone by President Theodore Roosevelt. The building was completed in 1911, and dedicated on November 9th by President William Taft. The memorial was formally made a national park in 1916.

The memorial was built on farm land owned by Lincoln’s family, and where Lincoln was raised until the age of 2. Within the memorial resides a cabin of similar size and design to the Lincoln cabin built on the site, not the original cabin itself. And exactly 54 steps, the age at which Lincoln died, lead up to the memorial.

In November 2001, the park was expanded to include Knob Creek, the site where Lincoln lived from age 2 to age 7. The site contains a 19th century log cabin, and a historic 20th century tavern, and is approximately 10 miles to the northeast on Highway 31E.

The main memorial was built in the Beaux-Arts neo-classical architectural style.

Written (and pictured) near the top of the memorial are the words “With Malice Toward None With Charity For All. They are words from Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address in 1865.