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Monuments

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Letter from Samuel Macauley Jackson to Theodore Roosevelt

Letter from Samuel Macauley Jackson to Theodore Roosevelt

Samuel Macauley Jackson, on behalf of the John Calvin Monument Fund Committee, extends his thanks to President Roosevelt for accepting the honorary presidency of the General Committee and to the Department of State. The Protestants in Geneva believe Americans will support their efforts to erect a monument to John Calvin in Geneva due to Roosevelt’s endorsement. Jackson updates Roosevelt on the plans for the placement, funding, and design of the monument.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-12-13

Mormon Battalion Monument, Capitol Grounds, Salt Lake City, Utah

Mormon Battalion Monument, Capitol Grounds, Salt Lake City, Utah

Colorized postcard showing a stone sculpture with a bronze statue of a man in front located by a pool of water. Text on the reverse of the postcard describes that the monument commemorates the men who volunteered to be part of the Mormon Battalion who marched from Iowa to California to participate in the Mexican War. The number designation on the front indicates the postcard is part of a series.

Collection

Charles C. Myers Collection

Creation Date

Unknown

Paris- Place de la Concorde

Paris- Place de la Concorde

Postcard showing the Place de la Concorde in Paris, France. A building visible in the background with a stone obelisk visible to the left and a statue to the right. Charles C. Myers notes that thousands of people were executed here by guillotine during the French Revolution. He discusses the obelisk and how Napoleon Bonaparte brought it from Egypt.

Comments and Context

In Charles C. Myers’s own words, “Place de la Concorde is one of the most beautifully arranged squares in the city and is situated in the fashionable part of the city. During the French Revolution this was an ill kept place and here was placed the guillotine by which over 2800 persons were beheaded in 1792. This obelisque [sic] that you see on the left is in the center of the square and is the one that once stood in front of the gateway, added by Ramses 2nd in 14th century B. C., to the great temple at Luxor in upper Egypt. It is a single piece of red granite 76 ft high and weighs 240 tons, similar in shape but much larger that [sic] Cleopatra’s needle in London. The hieroglyphics on the sides are the narrative of the deeds of Ramses 2nd.

It was one of Napoleons [sic] favorite deeds to accomplish what others said was impossible, when he brought this piece of stone over from Egypt early in the 18th century, but it was not erected in the present place till 1836. The building in the distant [sic] is the Famous Louvre Art Gallery which is the finest exclusive art gallery in the world.”

“In the Philippines”. Ande Monument. Manila.

“In the Philippines”. Ande Monument. Manila.

Postcard showing the Anda Monument and the surrounding area in Manila, Philippines. Many people are are gathered in front of the monument, and a boat with an American flag can be seen on the right side of the photograph.

Comments and Context

In Charles C. Myers’s own words, “This is one of the open squares in the business part of the city and where street parades and many entertainments are held.”

Collection

Charles C. Myers Collection

Why not have one like this?

Why not have one like this?

President Roosevelt looks up at a sphinx with the likeness of Ohio Senator Marcus Alonzo Hanna. The caption on the sphinx reads, “Hanna boom 1904.” Roosevelt holds a “Guide to Political Washington D.C.” In the background, Major General Leonard Wood and Estes G. Rathbone fight atop two pyramids. Caption: A number of bills are being presented in Congress for the erection of monuments of noted statesmen in the Washington Parks.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1903-11-24