The Indiana War Memorial Plaza Historic District contains a museum, three parks, and 24 acres of monuments, statues, sculptures, and fountains in the heart of downtown Indianapolis, making the state's capital second only to Washington D.C. in acreage and number of monuments dedicated to veterans.
Soldiers and Sailors Monument and Memorial. The Soldiers and … Centrally located in the seven-block war memorial … the USS Indianapolis Memorial was …
… and a noted sculptor of other Civil War memorial statues, … to Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument (Indianapolis). … Monument and Indiana War Memorial …
Indiana World War Memorial; Soldiers & Sailors Monument; … the City of Indianapolis and the state of Indiana. The Soldiers & Sailors Monument is Indiana's official …
Located in the heart of downtown in Monument Circle, it was originally designed to honor Indiana’s Civil War veterans. It now commemorates the valor of Hoosier veterans who served in all wars prior to WWI, including the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Frontier Wars and the Spanish-American War.
The Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument serves as a memorial to the soldiers and sailors who fought in the American Revolution, the Mexican-American War, the U.S. Civil War, and the Spanish-American War.
The State Soldiers and Sailors Monument, … Civil War memorial. … on the east and west sides of the monument and the Dying Soldier and Return Home groups …
The Indiana World War Memorial Plaza is an urban feature … filled with statues and a … in 2016, to include in its scope the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument …
Discover Downtown Indianapolis … Explore the lower level of Soldiers and Sailors Monument, … It occupies an entire city block of the War Memorial Plaza …
A statue of Civil War-era governor Oliver P. Morton, created by Franklin Simmons, preceded the monument and was incorporated into its construction. John H. Mahoney then created three other similarly scaled figures (General George Rogers Clark, Governor William Henry Harrison and Governor James Whitcomb), to reflect Indiana's participation in earlier conflicts.