Soldiers and Sailors Monument (Delphi, Indiana) explained

Soldiers and Sailors Monument
Artist:Rudolf Schwarz
Bruno Schmitz[1]
Year:-
Type:Bronze
Granite
Height Imperial:120
Width Imperial:36
Length Imperial:36
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:Delphi, Indiana, United States
Museum:Carroll County Courthouse
Coordinates:40.5863°N -86.6744°W
Owner:Carroll County Commissioners

The Soldiers and Sailors Monument is a work of public art in Delphi, Indiana in the United States. It is located at the Carroll County Courthouse, and comprises the collection on the National Register of Historic Places listing making up the courthouse and the square.

Description

The memorial is made of bronze and has a base made of granite. On the top of a tall shaft is a color bearer from the American Civil War. The color bearer holds a staff with a furled flag in both hands. It is held to his proper left side. The shaft the figure is standing on has two pieces of bunting decorating it, along with eagles, military medals, and a row of mortar shells and round shot. The tower is resting on a battlement style design. Each corner of the battlement design has a musket made of bronze. There are four in total.[2]

There is a bronze relief panel on each side of the base. They depict:

  1. Six infantrymen fighting eight artillerymen, representing the Battle of Shiloh and Battle of Stones River[2]
  2. Soldiers going off into battle and saying goodbye to their families to fight at the Battle of the Wilderness and Battle of Cedar Creek[2]
  3. Soldiers returning from battle from the Siege of Vicksburg and Battle of Champion Hill, titled The Return Home[1] [2]
  4. Cavalrymen fighting infantrymen at the Battle of Antietam and Battle of Gettysburg[2]

One of the panels is titled "The Dying Soldier," but it is unclear what one.[1] The base also has cut stone decorating it.[2]

A plaque, made of bronze, on the east side of the base says:[2]

ERECTED BY CARROLL COUNTY INDIANA

IN MEMORY OF HER SOLDIERS AND SAILORS

Acquisition

The county held an international competition for the creation of the monument. It was held in 1887. Architect Bruno Schmitz was awarded the commission, and he hired Rudolf Schwarz as the sculptor.[1] The exact date of the installation of the piece has yet to be determined. Documentation states that it was installed in either 1882, 1886 or 1888.[1] [2]

Other information

The piece has been described as being a combination of an "Egyptian obelisk form with Romantic classical elements" by historians. Sculptor Rudolf Schwarz also worked on the Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument in Indianapolis, therefore the Delphi piece has some of that influence in it.[1]

Condition

The sculpture was examined by a Save Outdoor Sculpture! surveyor in 1993. It was described as being "well maintained."[2]

Controversy

Author and director of Indiana's Save Outdoor Sculpture! initiative Glory-Jume Grieff states, "This pieces sometimes mistakenly attributed to Austrian-born sculptor Rudolpph Schwarz (1866-1912) but it was completed fifteen years before Schwarz arrived in Indiana."[3] The same is true for architect Schmitz.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. United States Department of the Interior. 17 March 2014. 24 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924042614/http://www.in.gov/dnr/historic/files/courthouse/Carroll.pdf. dead.
  2. Web site: Soldiers and Sailors Monument, (sculpture). Save Outdoor Sculpture!. Smithsonian Institution. 17 March 2014.
  3. Grieff, Glory-June, Remenbrance, Faith and Fancy: Outdoor Public Sculpture in Indiana, Indiana Historical Society Press, Indianapolis, 2005, p. 100