John Ericsson | |
Designer: | Jonathan Scott Hartley |
Type: | Statue |
Material: | Bronze |
Complete: | 1903 |
Location: | The Battery, New York City, New York, United States |
Coordinates: | 40.7036°N -74.0145°W |
Height: | Statue: 8inchesft7inchesin (ftin) Pedestal: 7inchesft11inchesin (ftin) |
Width: | 8feet |
Length: | 8feet |
John Ericsson is a Heroic-Scale bronze statue depicting John Ericsson, and is located in Battery Park in New York City
The statue depicts the esteemed Swedish-American engineer and inventor John Ericsson (1803–1889), who helped to revolutionize military-maritime technology with his ironclad warship, the .[1]
Less than four years after Ericsson's death, sculptor Jonathan Scott Hartley (1845–1912) was commissioned by the state of New York to create a larger-than-life bronze portrait of Ericsson, which was dedicated April 26, 1893 in Battery Park. The pedestal was designed by architect Frank Wallis; Hartley and Wallis also collaborated on the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Memorial, unveiled in Van Cortlandt Park in 1906. Ten years later the sculptor, dissatisfied with his first version, crafted a modified statue, cast at the local Roman Bronze Works, and dedicated on August 1, 1903, a day after the centennial of Ericsson’s birth.
The modified statue predates the John Ericsson Memorial in Washington, D.C. by 13 years.
The statue is located on the perimeter of Battery Park, on State Street, across from Bridge Street. Over time the monument suffered extensive damage, the result of weathering, vandalism, and even a fire. In 1996 the sculpture was conserved by Parks’ monuments crew, and as part of overall improvements to Battery Park, the sculpture is slated to be moved from its present location to a more prominent site near a perimeter entrance.
The figure (heroic scale) depicts Ericsson standing, holding a boat model in his hand. The bronze figure is 8'7"(2.6m) tall, atop a 7'11"(2.4) polished black diamond granite pedestal. Each side of the pedestal has bronze plaques with dimensions of 1'x2'3.5"(0.3mx0.7m) that illustrate significant naval battles involving the Monitor and Princeton, as well as an array of Ericsson’s mechanical inventions. The right side of the plinth is signed by the sculptor, and reads "J.S. Hartley 1902".
On the front of the pedestal the name "Ericsson" is engraved. On the back of the pedestal, it reads: