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| Riverside Drive is justly famed for its undulating route along the Hudson; Riverside Park -- New York's longest; its Beaux Arts and Art Deco apartment buildings; and Grant's Tomb, the massive memorial to the Ohioan at West 122nd Street. Grant and his wife are entombed, not buried there --though someone else is buried nearby. Less famed, though no less beautiful, is the massive Civil War- inspired Soldiers and Sailors Monument at Riverside Drive and West 89th. |
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President Theodore Roosevelt laid its cornerstone in 1900 and it was unveiled on May 30 (Memorial Day) 1902, after a peculiar speech by Mayor Seth Low who orated "those who fought for the Union in the Civil War stand in need of no monument of stone or bronze. Our happy, prosperous, and united country is itself a monument greater than any sculptor can devise or that loving hands can set up."
Prior to its unveiling the Monument was covered by the largest American flag produced to date, at 74 ft. by 40 ft.







HOME| LAMPS | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | ADS | TROLLEYS | SIGNS | COBBLESTONES | STREET SCENES | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | ALLEYS | NECROLOGY | CEMETERIES | NEIGHBORHOODS | FORGOTTENSLICES | FORGOTTENTOURS | SEARCH | FORGOTTENBOOK DIARY | FORGOTTENSTUFF | QUEENS CRAP
Photographed July 19, 2008; page completed August 14.
erpietri@earthlink.net
©2008