Scott Shaw/The Plain Dealer Cleveland's War Memorial Fountain, sculpted by Marshall Fredericks (1908-98), gleams in the sun after a recently completed conservation treatment.It's not easy being green, especially if you're a bronze sculpture in downtown Cleveland, where specialists sometimes disagree…
Cleveland War Memorial was originally erected to commemorate those who died in service or were killed in action during World War One. A plaque was added at a later date to commemorate the fallen of World War Two.
Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument: Civil War Memorial – See 307 traveler reviews, 130 candid photos, and great deals for Cleveland, OH, at TripAdvisor.
The Fountain of Eternal Life, also known as the War Memorial Fountain and Peace Arising from the Flames of War, is a statue and fountain in downtown Cleveland, Ohio designed by Cleveland Institute of Art graduate Marshall Fredericks and dedicated on May 30, 1964.
Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument: A Civil War Monument … 142 candid photos, and great deals for Cleveland, … Civil war memorial with sculptures.
The Ohio World War I Memorial, … the Ohio World War Memorial in the statue of a … Row tribute to fallen World War I soldiers, created in Cleveland in …
The Cleveland War Memorial … The Memorial was delivered to Cleveland and erected in early … It features a granite statue of a World War I Digger resting …
Amid the busy streets of downtown Cleveland stands the Soldiers and Sailors' Monument, built to honor the 10,000 Cuyahoga county residents who fought in the Civil War. Almost fifteen years after Major William J. Gleason first suggested the idea of honoring the bravery of these local Union soldiers, the monument was finally dedicated on July 4, 1894.
The Greater Cleveland Veterans Memorial (GCVM) web site was created as a living memorial to honor those Greater Clevelanders who lost their lives in times of war.
Inside the Memorial Room are four bronze relief sculptures: Women's Soldiers' and Sailors' Aid Society, Beginning of the War in Ohio, Emancipation of the Slaves and End of the War at City Point, Va. , as well as busts of Gen. James Barnett and Architect/ Sculptor Levi T. Scofield, together with 6 officers, who were either killed in action, or died of disease or their wounds.