United States Navy Memorial
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United States Navy Memorial | |
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IUCN Category V (Protected Landscape/Seascape) | |
Location: | Washington, D.C., USA |
Coordinates: | |
Established: | October 13, 1987 |
Governing body: | U.S. Navy Memorial Foundation |
The United States Navy Memorial at 7th Street between Pennsylvania Avenue and Indiana Avenue in Washington, D.C. honors those who have served, and are currently serving, in the Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and the Merchant Marine.
The National Park Service, through its National Mall and Memorial Parks administrative unit, provides technical and maintenance assistance to the foundation. The memorial is adjacent to the Archives-Navy Mem'l-Penn Quarter station and the National Archives building.
Associated with the Memorial is the U.S. Navy Memorial Museum. From March to October the museum is open to the public Monday through Saturday. From November to February the museum is open Tuesday through Saturday.
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[edit] History
In the Spring of 1977, Admiral Arleigh A. Burke, World War II war hero and former three-term Chief of Naval Operations, started to recruit a group to form the private, non-profit U. S. Navy Memorial Foundation. The following year, the Foundation, lead by Rear Admiral William Thompson, USN (Ret.), started to work on the five steps necessary in the building of a memorial in Washington: enabling legislation, design, site selection, fund raising and construction and maintenance.
Congress authorized the Memorial in 1980, with the stipulation that funding come solely from private contributions. In March 1980, President Jimmy Carter signed Public Law 96-199, which authorized the Memorial as a part of a larger Department of the Interior bill.
Although a number of sites in Washington, DC were possible, the Foundation teamed up with the Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation to use Market Square as the site for the Memorial. The Foundation and the Corporation jointly selected Conklin Rossant of New York as architects.
By December 1985, the Foundation had raised enough funds to warrant a go-ahead approval from the Secretary of the Interior, and construction got underway the following month. (The Foundation staff and Board of Directors had raised $18-million by opening day of the Visitors Center, and fund raising continues today, to retire remaining construction debt and support educational programs undertaken by the Foundation.)
By August 1987, Stanley Bleifeld completed work on the Lone Sailor statue as construction of the Memorial neared completion at the site.
The Memorial was dedicated on October 13, 1987.
From late 1987 to mid-1990, two buildings were constructed on the Memorial's northern perimeter. The eastern of the two buildings was selected for the Memorial's Visitors Center. The building's shell was sufficiently completed by September 1989 to allow construction to begin for the interior of the Visitors Center. The Visitors Center opened in June 1991 and was formally dedicated on October 12, 1991.
During the summer of 2006, the water in the fountains of the Navy Memorial was colored blue due to the presence of chemicals added to the water to fight algae growth.[1] According to a spokesperson for the memorial, the algae has been surprisingly difficult to remove, and that they "figured it was better to have blue water than to have an algae-encrusted memorial." The blue water is expected to be gone by the end of the summer.[2]
[edit] Memorial quotes
On an outdoor wall at the Naval Memorial are engraved noteworthy sayings from the history of the US Navy, and who said them. Here are some of them:
- "I have not yet begun to fight!" - Captain John Paul Jones - 1779
- "Don't give up the ship!" - Captain James Lawrence - 1813
- "We have met the enemy and they are ours." - Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry - 1813
- "Damn the torpedoes, full steam ahead." - Admiral David Farragut - 1864
- "You may fire when you are ready, Gridley." - Commodore George Dewey - 1898
- "Sighted sub, sank the same" - ? - AMM3C - 1942
[edit] See also
- Navy-Marine Memorial
- Peace Monument (Naval Monument)
- United States Marine Corps War Memorial
[edit] References
- ^ Kelly, John (June 30, 2006). John Kelly's Washington Live. The Washington Post. Retrieved on 2006-08-21.
- ^ Grass, Michael. "Blue Hue vs. Residue" (PDF), Express, The Washington Post, August 17, 2006, p. 36. Retrieved on 2006-08-21. (in English)