DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WORLD WAR I MEMORIAL
Designed by Washington architect Frederick H. Brooke, with Horace W. Peaslee and Nathan C. Wyeth as associate architects, the District of Columbia War Memorial is in the form of a 47 foot tall circular, domed, peristyle Doric temple. Resting on concrete foundations, the 4 foot high marble base defines a platform, 43 feet 5 inches in diameter, intended for use as a bandstand. Preserved in the cornerstone of the District of Columbia World War Memorial is a list of 26,000 Washingtonians who served in the Great War. Inscribed on the base are the names of the 499 District of Columbia citizens who lost their lives in the war, together with medallions representing the branches of the armed forces. Twelve 22 foot tall fluted Doric marble columns support the entablature and dome.
SEE ALSO-DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WORLD WAR I MEMORIAL STONES A, B, & C
SEE ALSO-DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WORLD WAR I MEMORIAL PLAQUE
SEE ALSO-DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WORLD WAR I MEMORIAL STONES A, B, & C
SEE ALSO-DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WORLD WAR I MEMORIAL PLAQUE
Listing Details
- Public
- WORLD WAR I
- War Memorial Temples
- 1931
- WEST POTOMAC PARK
- 20418
- SCHALENE DAGUITS
- SCHALENE DAGUITS
- This photograph was taken before the 2011 restoration
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