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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Men on horseback dominate memorials

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By

With all the memorials in the capital, you would think the man who came up with the idea for Memorial Day would have one of his own.

He does -- on Logan Circle at 13th and P streets Northwest. What makes the monument to Maj. Gen. John A. Logan special, vaulting it into the upper tier of Washington statuary, has less to do with his post-Civil War vision for what would become Memorial Day and more with the protocol of memorial sculpture: The man is on a warhorse.

"The biggest compliment you can give a man is not just to have him standing on a pedestal but sitting on top of a horse. There's a certain stature in the fact that you've got an equestrian," says George Gurney, deputy chief curator at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The museum has been cataloging the nation's outdoor sculptures for the past 20 years and helps run a program to preserve them.

Equestrian monuments are the creme de la creme of memorial sculpture, and Washington, with 28 at last count, has more of them than any other American city.

The range of their subject matter is relatively narrow. One pays tribute to a woman. One or two celebrate ideas or cultural icons. A few honor non-Americans. The vast majority memorialize Americans in battle and the qualities that make good soldiers -- honor, sacrifice, valor, grit, victory.

Even men who made their ultimate mark in politics or other fields are shown as they were -- or as the culture hoped they were -- in war.

None in the District salutes the heroes of the Confederacy, perhaps understandably: Most monuments to Union officers were unveiled when the wounds of the Civil War were fresh. For a mirror image, head for Richmond.

Washington's horse-and-rider monuments are familiar fixtures of parks, circles and squares, but too often they blend into the background as drivers and pedestrians speed by. Let's slow down for a closer look, touring a dozen neighborhoods, most lying within a triangle bounded by Adams Morgan, Foggy Bottom and Capitol Hill.

The all-important steed

Our tour begins with the earliest equestrian statue in America, the centrally located portrayal of Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square, across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. His horse rearing on two legs, Jackson doffs his hat in a pose depicting the general as he reviewed the troops in 1815 at the Battle of New Orleans, which ended the War of 1812.

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