A truly amazing sculpture of a kneeling soldier that is life-size and very large to be the ultimate memorial and tribute to the heroes that fight for our country. Pay the ultimate tribute to your heroes with a long last, heavy cast bronze memorial for your organization, park or even your own home.
The Three Servicemen statue, at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, is unveiled, Thursday, July 8, 2010, following six weeks of restoration work, by, from left, retired Army Brig. Gen. George Price, Superintendent of the National Mall and Memorial Parks John Piltzecker, wife of the artist Lindy Hart, and Jan Scruggs, right, founder and president of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund.
This memorial marks the place of the epic battle fought there in the war against Napoleon in 1813. Seifert today is recognized as one of the greatest artists in the presentation of realism-in-sculpture right along with Josef Thorak and Arno Brecker.
America's Response Monument, subtitled De Oppresso Liber, is a life-and-a-half scale bronze statue in Liberty Park overlooking the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York City.
The memorial consists of a Portland stone column approximately 7.5 metres (25 ft) high, with buttress plinths, on a granite base, and attached bronze sculptures. On each of the buttress plinths, to the north and south of the central column, is a life-size bronze statue of a soldier standing at ease with a rifle, one representing the Royal Fusiliers and the other the Royal Field Artillery.
Veterans Memorial Park in downtown Pensacola is home to the Wall South, the nation's only permanent replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Veterans and their families come to find the names of friends and loved ones among those of the 58,217 Americans killed or missing in action in the Vietnam War.
A COMMEMORATIVE HISTORY OF SOLDIERS’ MONUMENT To the Memory of the Wisconsin Men Who Fought in the War for the Union, 1861-1865. Atlanta Gettysburg
Sculptures of infantrymen—or “doughboys,” as soldiers in the Great War were called—were among the most popular American memorials to World War I. Fighting soldiers, in particular, held special appeal in the 1920s.
Korean War Veterans Memorial – Washington, DC – At whatever point you stand in the memorial, one of the soldiers will always be looking at you. Korean War Veterans Memorial- 19 stainless steel statues consisting of 14 Army, 3 Marine, 1 Navy, and 1 Air Force.
The sculpture's origins began after the battle of Fort Wagner, when men of the 54th proposed a memorial to Shaw near the Fort and the mass burial site. Shaw's father suggested at that time "The monument, though originated for my son, ought to bear, with his, the names of his brave officers and men, who fell and were buried with him."