War Memorial Plaza

Limestone horse and eagle at the War Memorial building

War Memorial Plaza is a park in Downtown Baltimore between City Hall and the Baltimore War Memorial.

History

On the northwest corner of the present square at the intersection of Holliday and East Lexington Streets were a set of townhouses that were the sites for the opening of Loyola High School and Loyola College in 1852 by the Roman Catholic Society of Jesus (Jesuits). After a brief time, the two institutions relocated in 1855 to the west side of North Calvert Street between East Madison and Monument Streets in a large central Italianate building with a front portico connected to St. Ignatius Roman Catholic Church which had been recently completed on the north. They remained here (along with a large similarly-styled addition to the south along East Monument Street in the 1890s) until the mid-20th Century with the College relocating in 1922 to its present "Evergreen" campus in North Baltimore City near Homeland community at North Charles Street and East Cold Spring Lane, next door to the landmark "Evergreen Mansion", (of the Garrett Family railroad and financier family giants) and the High School moved in 1934/1941 to "Blakefield" in west Towson, north of the city in Baltimore County. In 1975, the old Loyola complex was converted into a performing arts center for the decade-old Center Stage.

A few doors to the south was "Prof. Knapp's School", attended by many German immigrant students including the noted Henry Louis Mencken, the famed Baltimore Sun reporter, editor, columnist, author and linguist in the late 1880s, just before he graduated and went on to the former "Baltimore Manual Training School" (founded 1883) in the late 1890s (now the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute on Courtland Street [presently St. Paul Place and Street] - now on the site of Mercy Hospital (now Mercy Medical Center).

From its dedication in 1875 to 1917, the new second Baltimore City Hall faced the second building of the Holliday Street Theatre rebuilt in 1813, (first built of wood in 1795), designed by famous local architect Robert Cary Long, with a front facade in stone of Greek Revival style which was the most notable playhouse in Baltimore for decades. It is said that the first public singing of the future National Anthem occurred on the stage here in late September 1814, near the end of the War of 1812, when the poem of The Defence of Fort McHenry written by Georgetown lawyer and amateur poet Francis Scott Key, aboard a truce ship downriver from the British Royal Navy fleet as it bombarded Fort McHenry during September 12–14, 1814 several weeks earlier and set to music with the tune To An Anacreon in Heaven, a so-called English drinking song. It was also reputedly said to be re-sung lustily by the after-the-show crowd at the next door Theatre Tavern, (to the south, towards East Fayette Street).

To its south at the intersection with East Fayette Street was the landmark "Old Assembly-Rooms" built also in 1799 by Robert Cary Long, Sr. of Georgian/Federal styled architecture with chambers for social dancing, receptions and levees for the ladies and gentlemen of the era. By the mid-1840s, with the addition of a third floor and a flat pediment earlier in 1835, the "Rooms" were occupied by the young men of the then decade-old "Central High School of Baltimore", later renamed the Baltimore City College in 1866. Founded in 1839 a few blocks away on Courtland Street (now St. Paul Street/Place/Preston Gardens, C.H.S. (now the B.C.C.) was later considered to be the third oldest public high school in America.

Both were destroyed in a large disastrous fire in 1873, and the Central High School later moved to new quarters especially built for it for the first time of Tudor Revival/Jacobethan Revival style of building at the southwest corner of North Howard and West Centre Streets, but the venerable Holliday Street theatre was rebuilt on its original site and owned by the famous John T. Ford, (1829–1894), local politician/municipal board member and East Coast playhouse operator, who also was proprietor of the infamous Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. where 16th President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in April 1865 after the end of the American Civil War (1861–1865).

Two years after being rebuilt, the theatre was overwhelmed by the massive pile of marble and granite French Second Empire styled architecture with construction across the street to the west in the new domed Baltimore City Hall of 1867–1875 by George A. Frederick, (1842–1924), a municipal architect who also designed a lot of the structures in the new Druid Hill Park (established 1860) and other city structures. By the time that the theater and its surrounding block (Holliday to Fayette to North Gay to East Lexington Streets) was torn down in 1917, based on the 1910 plans of Frederick Law Olmsted, to make room for the newly laid-out War Memorial Plaza and Building.[1] The War Memorial Building was designed by Laurence Hall Fowler and originally dedicated to Marylanders who died in World War I and built in the early 1920s, dedicated 1925 and is one of many World War I Memorials for "The Great War" throughout the world built in the various participating Allied nations since the conflict of 1914–1918.

Present

"Negro soldier" statue in front of City Hall

War Memorial Plaza is a major component of Baltimore's municipal center (aka "civic center") now officially referred to as the Business and Government Historic District[2] and is included in Baltimore National Heritage Area, under sponsorship of the City, State and the National Park Service of the U.S. Department of the Interior.[3]

The plaza contains the statue "Negro Soldier", also originally called the "Negro War Heroes Monument". It was created by sculptor James E. Lewis (a gallery of art at Morgan State University in northeast Baltimore is dedicated to him) in 1971. The statue originally sited at the north end, facing up Calvert Street at the Battle Monument Square between East Lexington and East Fayette Streets, two blocks west) was relocated to War Memorial Plaza in 2007 after 30 years of facing the wrong way on a one-way street.[4][5][6]

References

  1. "Holliday Street Theater". The Cambridge Guide to American Theatre (2 ed.). Cambridge University Press. 2007. p. 331. ISBN 9780521835381. It was pulled down in 1813 and a new theater built on the site; this the city of Baltimore razed in 1917 to construct War Memorial Plaza
  2. "Business and Government Historic District". Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved March 12, 2012.
  3. "Baltimore National Heritage Area Map". City of Baltimore. Retrieved March 11, 2012.
  4. Kane, Gregory (January 13, 2007). "Long-ignored memorial makes a prominent move: New home chosen for statue honoring black soldiers". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 6, 2012. No work of Dr. Lewis' was more controversial than his 1972 sculpture, the 'Black Soldier,' " noted a Sun editorial of Aug. 12, 1997. "Its placement in Battle Monument Plaza was opposed by critics who thought the statue was inappropriate at a memorial to those who fought in the 1814 Battle of North Point or argued that no more tributes to the military were needed at all.
  5. "Negro Soldier - Baltimore, MD". Waymark. Retrieved August 6, 2012. The sculpture was commissioned by an anonymous donor as a gift to the City of Baltimore. The cost was $30,000. Controversy arose over the original placement of the statue at the site of the Battle Monument (IAS 75005996). Some felt that the addition of any sculpture to Battle Monument Plaza would diminish the significance of the "Battle Monument", the City's first monument to the War of 1812 of those killed during the Battle of Baltimore - with the bombardment of Fort McHenry and the Battle of North Point in southeastern Baltimore County, and reportedly the nation's first memorial to the common soldiers and officers of its war dead. Others raised concerns that a monument, which was representative of only one ethnic group as opposed to an individual or the entire group of 1814 war casualties, would have a polarizing effect in the City and racial relations.
  6. "Negro Heroes of the US". Fieldguide to U.S. Public Monuments and Memorials. 2011. Retrieved August 6, 2012.

External links

Coordinates: 39°17′43″N 76°36′35″W / 39.29538°N 76.60964°W