Eternal Light Peace Memorial

Eternal Light Peace Memorial
historic district contributing structure[1]
The memorial has "The Flame of Eternal Peace"[2] and relief sculptures of 2 women and an American eagle.[3]
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
County Adams
NPS unit Gettysburg National Military Park
Range Oak Ridge [4]
Location Oak Hill
 - coordinates
Highest point Flame urn (protection for rain & wind up to 40 mph) [5]
 - coordinates
Bidding
Dedication
January 1938[4]
July 3, 1938
Management National Park Service
Owner US federal government
Parking along Confederate Av (entrance along Mummasburg Rd)
GNMP structure MN006 [1]
Architect
Sculptor
Builder
Paul Philippe Cret[4]
Lee Lawrie
George A. Fuller Company[6]
Shaft
Base
Alabama Rockwood Limestone
Maine granite [1]
Website: Park Scenes (nps.gov)

The Eternal Light Peace Memorial is a 1938 Gettysburg Battlefield monument commemorating the 1913 "reconciliation of our people North and South after the lapse of only 50 years since they had fought" in the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg.[7] The natural gas flame in a 1 ton bronze urn is atop a tower on a stone pedestrian terrace with views from the terraced hill summit over about 400 sq mi (1,000 km2),[5] and the flame is visible from 20 mi (32 km) away.[8]

History

In 1887, "the Philadelphia Brigade, Col. Cowan and others" advocated a "grand monument to American Heroism on this battlefield",[9] and President William McKinley spoke to Cowan about North/South peace]][7] in 1900.[10] The "first tentative programme" of October 1910 for the 1913 Gettysburg reunion planned a "Peace Jubilee" to be held on "National Day" with an oration by President Woodrow Wilson and the cornerstone placement for the "Great Peace Memorial" at noon.[11]:173 However, after being "presented, January 11th, 1912, to the Joint Committee of the Congress [for] the Celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg", funding was "found, in March 1912, impossible of accomplishment in the 62nd Congress".[11]:166 Instead of the laying of a cornerstone, on July 3 during the New York Veterans' Celebration in the 1913 Great Tent,[11]:153 Colonel Andrew Cowan gave a speech advocating the memorial, and "steps to accomplish such purpose were immediately taken … which resulted in the Gettysburg Peace Memorial Association being formed. … That Association's Bill was, on December 20th, 1913, presented to Congress…creating the Gettysburg Memorial Commission."[11]:167

The original plan was for a $250,000 "monument of peace" at The Angle,[12] but despite 1914 "Peace Memorial Bill" presentations to the US House of Representatives[7] that compared the planned memorial with "the Christ in the Andes"[7] and the Lincoln Memorial,[13] federal funding remained "postponed". In August 1936, the memorial's commission issued 10,000 four page circulars to publicize the plan,[4] and Virginia in 1936 was the first to appropriate funds.[14] In 1937 the Pennsylvania legislature began planning a peace memorial on Big Round Top,[15][16] and the state's "Peace Memorial Bill" was signed on February 24, 1937, to appropriate $5,000 for the state's "Gettysburg Peace Memorial fund".[17] The peace memorial committee selected from the 6 designs by August 1937[5] and on December 10, 1937, Lee Lawrie was announced as the sculptor for the structure "overlooking Big Round Top [and] Little Round Top".[18] With additional funding by New York, Indiana, Tennessee, Illinois, and Wisconsin;[6] the $60,000 monument was instead completed northwest of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Groundbreaking was on February 14,[7] and the last foot of piping for the flame's gas supply was placed on May 31.[19]

Dedication

Attendance for the memorial's dedication at the 1938 Gettysburg reunion was 250,000 (100,000 were "stuck on automobile-packed highways".)[20]

A program from the dedication is in the Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center[28] and on September 23, 1938, a World's Fair time capsule with a "permanent acetate film by RKO-Pathé" (15 minute newsreel)[29] with part of Roosevelt's address was lowered into a 50 ft well.[30] On December 25, 1941, the flame was reduced to a pilot light during World War II,[11] and just prior to the 1946 Paris peace conference, President Truman commented about the inscribed motto, Peace Eternal in a Nation United: "That is what we want, but let's change that word (nation) to world and we'll have something."[12] The deteriorated Alabama limestone in the lower section that had been approved for use by the Bureau of Standards[13] was replaced with gray granite in June 1941,[14] and repairs were also made in 1950.[15] A 1962 protest against nuclear arms and testing was held at the memorial,[16] and the flame was extinguished in 1974 for the oil crisis[31] after the 93rd United States Congress prohibited such flames (except for the John F. Kennedy Eternal Flame),[17] and the extinguished gas flame was replaced by an electrical light in 1976.[18] A Gettysburg Peace Celebration Committee had been formed by June 1988,[G 2] and the gas flame was restored at their Fiftieth Anniversary Rededication on July 3.[G 3]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Eternal Light Peace Memorial". (structure ID MN006, LCS ID 009952) List of Classified Structures: GETT p. 10. National Park Service. 1938 (documented 2004). http://www.hscl.cr.nps.gov/insidenps/report.asp?PARK=GETT&RECORDNO=237. Retrieved 2011-10-16. "Contributing feature to Gettysburg National Military Park HD … Mn 42'x85'overall. 40' tall shaft rising from center of an elevated platform 11'. Bronze dish-shaped urn caps shaft to accommodate [sic] "eternal flame". Exedra at rear of platform. 8' bas-relief on S of shaft. Inscritpions [sic] on S, E & W. … The dark colored stone base is constructed of Maine granite and the lighter colored shaft of Alabama Rockwood Limestone." 
  2. ^ Pickard, Edward W. (July 14, 1938). "Yanks and Johnny Rebs" (Google News Archive). The Cambridge City Tribune. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=snpVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=dj8NAAAAIBAJ&pg=2846,2269179&dq=works-progress+battlefield+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  3. ^ "'Eternal Light' Peace Memorial Now Completed" (Google News Archive). The Morning Observer (The Washington Observer). http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=_AdfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=QE0NAAAAIBAJ&pg=7034,5075862&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-02. 
  4. ^ a b c "To Open Bids on Peace Memorial in Two Weeks" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel. January 8, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kYklAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ufIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1075,2172286&dq=1938+roosevelt+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-17. "the large drawings which have been on display at the Hotel Gettysburg for the last two weeks. …the memorial will be cut during the winter." 
  5. ^ a b "“Eternal Light” Will Burn on Gettysburg Battlefield" (Google News Archive). The Daily Times (Beaver). June 17, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=8KoiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=sK8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=988,3883422&dq=virginia+peace-memorial&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-02. 
  6. ^ "Repairs to the Eternal Light Peace Memorial" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel. June 21, 1941. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=MIslAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wPIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2544,3900338&dq=gettysburg+peace-memorial&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-19. 
  7. ^ a b c d "The Peace Memorial Bill: Speech of Colonel Andrew Cowan of Louisville" (Google News Archive). Gettysburg Compiler. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kdElAAAAIBAJ&sjid=yfQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=7214,4563599&dq=andrew-cowan+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-19. "I then started to retire, but the President William McKinley said, "Sit down, please, I want to talk with you." … Then he began to talk about the unfortunate conditions, political and social, that existed in the South, between men from the North who had gone there since the war and men of the South whose homes had been there since before the war." 
  8. ^ "Anniversary's Eternal Light is Complete" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel (Gettysburg, Pennsylvania). June 4, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ooklAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ufIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3293,1634576&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-02. 
  9. ^ "Town and Country" (Google News Archive). Gettysburg Compiler. October 4, 1887. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ilQmAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JgAGAAAAIBAJ&pg=1646,6385126&dq=round-top-park+1887&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-07-07. "Penna. College to have Another Large Building … on the lot purchased from Hon. S. R. Russell, facing east, the front being about 40 feet west of a line between President McKnight's residence and Linnean Hall … 162 feet long by 69 feet deep, the chapel extending back from the centre 52 feet further. The style of architecture is Romanesque, built of brick trimmed with Hummelstown brownstone, three stories high, with a tower 142 feet high on the front, calculated for a lookout. col. 3 … The project for the erection of a grand monument to American Heroism on this battlefield is being pushed by the veterans of the Philadelphia Brigade, Col. Cowan and others." col. 4
  10. ^ New York Times, March 24, 1900, p. 3.
  11. ^ a b c d Beitler, Lewis Eugene (editor and compiler) (December 31, 1913) (Google Books). Fiftieth Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg: Report of the Pennsylvania Commission (Report). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Wm. Stanley Bay (state printer). pp. 173. http://books.google.com/books?id=swkTAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA167. Retrieved 2011-02-04. ""This grand celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the battle marks a high-tide of peace between the North and South … Peace Monument…in commemoration of this wonderful Reunion of more than 50,000 soldiers in Blue and Gray who fought bravely here and on so many other battlefields of the Civl War … a memorial illustrating national peace and civic brotherhood … We regard the erection of this memorial as by far the most important part of the proposed celebration of this anniversary"  (Col Andrew Cowan speech, July 3, 1913)
  12. ^ "Veteran's Joyful Over Camp's End" (Google News Archive). The Day (New London, Connecticut). July 3, 1913. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=S0kiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rnQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2009,237140&dq=the-angle+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-19. 
  13. ^ "The Peace Memorial Bill: Speech of Hon. John Lamb of Richmond, VA." (Google News Archive). Gettysburg Compiler. May 9, 1914. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CVImAAAAIBAJ&sjid=6P8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=7097,666374&dq=peace-memorial-bill&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-19. "the erection of this peace monument to commemorate the gathering 50 years after the war…is a fitting and proper thing" 
  14. ^ "Eternal Peace Light Memorial" (descriptive marker about the memorial). National Park Service. http://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=15447. Retrieved 2011-02-02. 
  15. ^ "Senator Rice Sponsors Bill for Gettysburg Peace Memorial" (Google News Archive). Gettysburg Compiler. Jan 20, 1937. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CigzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=bQAGAAAAIBAJ&pg=6811,2285355&dq=1937+big-round-top&hl=en. Retrieved 2010-03-20. 
  16. ^ "Measure Calls for Creation of $100,000 Fund; Eternal Light To Be Built on Battlefield and Dedicated at Anniversary and Reunion in 1938" (Google News Archive). Star and Sentinel . January 30, 1937. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZYklAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ufIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1052,3387574&dq=1937+big-round-top&hl=en. Retrieved 2010-03-20. 
  17. ^ "Signs Bill for Light Memorial" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZoklAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ufIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5568,3308147&dq=peace-memorial-bill&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-02. 
  18. ^ "3,000 C. W. Vets to attend Reunion". New Oxford Item. December 16, 1937. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=e889AAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZTcMAAAAIBAJ&pg=7512,2289228&dq=lee-lawrie+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-17. "The name of Punxsutawney, Jefferson county, meant "gnattown" in the original Delaware tongue." 
  19. ^ "Roosevelt to Dedicate Gettysburg Memorial". Reading Eagle. May 31, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=d7IhAAAAIBAJ&sjid=65sFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4020,6488061&dq=woodring+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-10. "As workment laid the last foot of a pipe line that will bring from the rich fields of Western Pennsylvania natural gas to feed the flame" 
  20. ^ "Peace Eternal in a Nation United". Virtual Tour - Day One: Oak Hill. NPS.gov. http://www.nps.gov/archive/gett/getttour/tstops/tstd-03.htm. Retrieved 2011-10-19. 
  21. ^ a b "Here and There With the Veterans" (Google News Archive). The Star and Sentinel. July 9, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=pYklAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ufIFAAAAIBAJ&dq=1938%20roosevelt%20gettysburg&pg=1108%2C1491638. Retrieved 2011-10-17. "The Roosevelt special train unloaded at a temporary platform, adjacent to the Confederate camp where the veterans were met by buses earlier in the week. Lincoln, when he dedicated the National cemetery, November 19, 1863, arrived at a little red stone station, still standing one block from the Gettysburg square."  NOTE: Roosevelt's last visit to the Gettysburg Battlefield in 1943 as host to Winston Churchill on an auto tour [1] (his 1st of 3 visits was as the 1934 Memorial Day speaker.)[2][3]
  22. ^ a b c "President Roosevelt Dedicates Eternal Light Peace Memorial to Cause of Peace Before 200,000 as Climax to 75th Anniversary of Civil War Battle". Star and Sentinel. July 9, 2010. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=pYklAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ufIFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1912,1521684&dq=1938+roosevelt+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-08. 
  23. ^ "'Rebel' Commander Enters Gettysburg" (Google News Archive). The Pittsburgh Press. July 1, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZCsbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=BE0EAAAAIBAJ&pg=2893,5160518&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-10-17. 
  24. ^ "Roosevelt Remains at Hyde Park Home". The Pittsburgh Press. June 28, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=YSsbAAAAIBAJ&sjid=BE0EAAAAIBAJ&pg=3398,4313743&dq=1938+roosevelt+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-12. 
  25. ^ "Philosophy of Lincoln used by Roosevelt". Milwaukee Sentinel. July 4, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=v4NSAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Pw0EAAAAIBAJ&pg=7013,636571&dq=1938+roosevelt+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-08. 
  26. ^ "Flame Burning on Monument at Gettysburg". The Telegraph Herald. July 4, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=k9tBAAAAIBAJ&sjid=3akMAAAAIBAJ&pg=3879,598708&dq=1938+roosevelt+gettysburg&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-08. 
  27. ^ a b c "Throng at Gettysburg Hears Roosevelt Call For Peace Campaign". Reading Eagle. July 4, 1938. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=5lohAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4ocFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2529,642073&dq=sixth-field-artillery+gettysburg&hl=en. "Whitworth guns of Hill's Corps [on Oak Hill] that raked Union positions on Big Round Top, a mile and a half [sic] distant."  (Roosevelt 1913 Gettysburg reunion address)
  28. ^ "Office of Museum Services". Gettysburg National Military Park. http://www.nps.gov/gett/historyculture/museum-services.htm. Retrieved 2011-10-19. 
  29. ^ "A Picture of Today for a World 5000 Years Away" (Paperspast webpage). The Saturday Evening Post CXXVI (116): p. 28. November 12, 1938. http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=EP19381112.2.166. Retrieved 2011-02-09. 
  30. ^ "Capsule Contents". DavidSZond.com. http://davidszondy.com/future/timecapsule/timecontents.htm. Retrieved 2011-02-09. 
  31. ^ "[Oil] Crisis Claims Eternal Flame" (Google News Archive). Youngstown Vindicator. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=EaRJAAAAIBAJ&sjid=V4QMAAAAIBAJ&pg=738,4690630&dq=gettysburg+peace-memorial&hl=en. Retrieved 2011-02-02. 
G. "Gettysburg Times Archives". (Google News Archive) Gettysburg Times (Times and News Publishing Company). http://www.gettysburgtimes.com/archives/. Retrieved 2010-02-20.