Women's Titanic Memorial

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Titanic Memorial
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: Water and P Sts., SW, Washington, D.C.
Nearest city: Washington, D.C.
Coordinates: 38°52′19″N 77°01′09.5″W / 38.87194, -77.019306Coordinates: 38°52′19″N 77°01′09.5″W / 38.87194, -77.019306
Built/Founded: 1931
Architect: Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney and John Horrigan
Architectural style(s): Classical statue
Added to NRHP: October 12, 2007

The Women's Titanic Memorial is a granite statue in southwest Washington, D.C., that honors the men who died on the RMS Titanic. The thirteen-foot-tall figure is of a partly clad male figure with arms outstretched. The statue was erected by the Women's Titanic Memorial Association.

The memorial is located on P Street SW next to the Washington Channel near Fort Lesley J. McNair. It was designed by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, who won the commission in open competition, and sculpted by John Horrigan. It was unveiled on May 26, 1931, by Helen Herron Taft, the widow of President Taft.

It was originally located on the site where the Kennedy Center now stands. It was moved to its present location in 1972.

A replica of the head of the memorial, carved in marble and exhibited in Paris in 1921, was purchased by the French Government for the Musée du Luxembourg.

In the 1997 film Titanic there is a scene in which Kate Winslet imitates the statue's pose on the bow of the Titanic.

[edit] Inscription

TO THE BRAVE MEN
WHO PERISHED
IN THE WRECK
OF THE TITANIC
APRIL 15 1912
THEY GAVE THEIR
LIVES THAT WOMEN
AND CHILDREN
MIGHT BE SAVED

ERECTED BY THE
WOMEN OF AMERICA

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