National War Correspondents Memorial

The National War Correspondents Memorial, part of Gathland State Park, is a memorial dedicated to journalists who died in war. It is located in Maryland, at Crampton's Gap at South Mountain.[1] Civil War correspondent George Alfred Townsend, or "Gath", built the arch in 1896,[2] and it was dedicated October 16, 1896.[1]

The War Correspondents Memorial Arch

It is claimed that the arch is the only monument in the world dedicated to journalists killed in combat.[3][4] However, a tree in Arlington National Cemetery was also dedicated as a war correspondents' memorial in 1986.[5]

Description

The book George Alfred Townsend describes the monument:

In appearance the monument is quite odd. It is fifty feet high and forty feet broad. Above a Moorish arch sixteen feet high built of Hummelstown purple stone are super-imposed three Roman arches. These are flanked on one side with a square crenellated tower, producing a bizarre and picturesque effect. Niches in different places shelter the carving of two horses' heads, and symbolic terra cotta statuettes of Mercury, Electricity and Poetry. Tables under the horses' heads bear the suggestive words "Speed" and "Heed"; the heads are over the Roman arches. The three Roman arches are made of limestone from Creek Battlefield, Virginia, and each is nine feet high and six feet wide. These arches represent Description, Depiction and Photography. The aforementioned tower contains a statue of Pan with the traditional pipes, and he is either half drawing or sheathing a Roman sword. Over a small turret on the opposite side of the tower is a gold vane of a pen bending a sword. At various places on the monument are quotations appropriate to the art of war correspondence. These are from a great variety of sources beginning with Old Testament verses. Perhaps the most striking feature of all are the tablets inscribed with the names of 157 correspondents and war artists who saw and described in narrative and picture almost all the events of the tour years of the war.[6]

This account errs in that "Speed" and "Heed" appear under the heads of Electricity and Poetry, and the "statue of Pan" is actually a zinc copy of Bertel Thorvaldsen's Mercury About to Kill Argos created by the J.W. Fiske Company.[7]

Monument Text:

SPEED – HEED

Sept. 14 – 62 – 96

To the Army Correspondents

and

Artists 1861–65

Whose toils cheered the fireside

Educated provinces of rustics into

a bright nation of readers

and gave incentive to narrate

distant wars and explore dark lands.

Erected by subscriptions

1896

North side of Monument:

O wondrous youth

Through this grand ruth

Runs my boy's life, its thread

The General's fame, the battle's name

The rolls of maimed and dead

I bear with my thrilled soul astir

And lonely thoughts and fears

And am but history's courier

To bind the conquering years

A battle's ray, through ages gray

To light the deeds sublime

And flash the lustre of my day

Down all the aisles of time

War Correspondent Ballad – 1865[8]

Although Townsend retained ownership of the property until his death in 1914, maintenance of the monument itself was entrusted to the National Park Service – previously to the War Department – in 1904.[9]

The monument's plaques lists 157 names which are sometimes assumed to be all war correspondents. In the late 1990s, local historian Timothy J. Reese analyzed the list and asserted that only 135 can claim to be war correspondents or artists, and 33 of those are not identifiable in the historical record. Furthermore, many names are misstated and several important names are missing.[1][10]

Additions

Unchanged for over a century, the arch had four names added in 2003: David Bloom, Michael Kelly, Elizabeth Neuffer, and Daniel Pearl.[11]

References

  1. "War Correspondents Memorial Arch". National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. Retrieved December 11, 2012.
  2. "The Civil War Correspondents Memorial Arch: George Alfred Townsend". Retrieved December 11, 2012.
  3. "Prelude to great struggle at Antietam". Western Maryland History Online (whilbr.org). Retrieved January 9, 2007.
  4. "War Correspondents Memorial Arch, Crampton's Gap, Maryland". Office of the Maryland Secretary of State. Archived from the original on October 13, 2006. Retrieved January 9, 2007.
  5. Journalists At Risk: Reporting America's Wars, p. 9, George Sullivan, Twentieth Century Books, 2005 . In addition, there are at least two prominent US monuments more broadly commemorating journalists killed in combat or otherwise in the line of duty – the Overseas Press Club Memorial Press Center building in New York City which was dedicated in 1954 ; and the Freedom Forum Journalists Memorial in Freedom Park, Arlington, Virginia, dedicated in 1996 . The Journalists Memorial monument with a similar broad dedication and purportedly the first of its kind in Europe, was inaugurated by Reporters Without Borders in Bayeux, France in 2006
  6. Hindes, R. (1946). George Alfred Townsend: One of Delaware's outstanding writers. Hambleton Printing & Publishing Company.
  7. Grissom, Carol A. Zinc Sculpture in America: 1850–1950, University of Delaware Press, Newark, 2009 pp. 224–224
  8. "Antietam Battlefield Monuments: War Correspondents Memorial Arch". National Park Service. Archived from the original on June 6, 2013. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  9. Weeks, R. "The Civil War Correspondents Memorial Arch". Civil War Home. Retrieved January 8, 2007.
  10. "War correspondents arch contains monumental errors", Associated Press, April 2, 1998, retrieved via Factiva; "The Truth About the War Memorial to Fallen Journalists", Timothy J. Reese, History News Network, George Mason University, posted October 6, 2003. Retrieved January 10, 2007.
  11. "DNR Snapshot: Gathland State Park War Correspondents Memorial". Maryland Dept. of Natural Resources. Retrieved December 11, 2012.

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