Charlottesville
|
08-29-2017, 06:40 AM
Post: #92
|
|||
|
|||
RE: Charlottesville
This post has little to do with what happened in Charlottesville, but it does focus on the monuments: http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/whi...ar-statues
I love this section which explains the success of the Monumental Bronze Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut, which boasted its monuments would last as long as the pyramids of Egypt: Monumental Bronze Co. set itself apart from its competitors in three ways. One was variety: customers could get an urn-topped pillar, a St. Joseph, or an elephant holding a bushel of cigars, each one on a pedestal with four fully customizable panels. (“It [was] like going to Wal-Mart,” monument expert Timothy S. Sedore told the AP.) They also had a whole muster of Civil War statues in various designs, the parts of which could also be easily interchanged, Mr. Potato Head-style. “Statue of American Soldier” was a man with a mustache and a billed cap, holding his gun in both hands. “Colorbearer” had a flag draped over his shoulder. “Confederate Soldier,” introduced in 1889, wore a broad-brimmed hat and carried a bedroll. You could also get your soldiers custom-made: the Confederate Monument in Portsmouth, Virginia has four Monumental Bronze Co. statues on it, each fashioned after a local man. Another of their selling points was price: thanks to their choice of material (as well as their distribution model, which relied on independent “agents” and eliminated the need for storerooms) they could easily undersell stone-based companies. In 1890, a “life size” soldier from Monumental Bronze Co. would set you back $450, the equivalent of $12,000 today—tough, but doable, especially if the whole town was chipping in. |
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
User(s) browsing this thread: 16 Guest(s)