Ezra Cornell | |
Designer: | Hermon Atkins MacNeil |
Location: | Arts Quad, Ithaca, New York, United States |
Dedicated: | June 22, 1919 |
Dedicated To: | Ezra Cornell |
Material: | Bronze Granite |
Coordinates: | 42.449°N -76.4852°W |
Type: | Statue |
Complete: | 1917 |
Begin: | 1915 |
Ezra Cornell is a monumental statue in Ithaca, New York, United States. Located on the Arts Quad of the Cornell Central Campus, the monument honors Ezra Cornell, the co-founder and namesake of Cornell University. The statue, designed by Hermon Atkins MacNeil, was dedicated in 1919.
Ezra Cornell was born on January 11, 1807, in Westchester County, New York. In 1828, he moved to Ithaca, New York, where he managed a flouring mill and other factories along the Fall Creek. In the 1840s, after becoming acquainted with Samuel Morse, Cornell became involved in the creation of telegraph lines in the Northeastern United States, and in 1855 he founded the Western Union Telegraph Company. Despite retiring in 1858, Cornell remained active in politics and philanthropy. As a Republican, he served on the New York State Assembly and later the New York State Senate throughout the 1860s and established a public library in Ithaca in 1863. During this time, Cornell also became involved in the creation of Cornell University in Ithaca. In 1865, Cornell became the chairman of the Cornell University Board of Trustees, a position he would hold until his death, and he proceeded to help the newly established institution grow by securing its designation as New York's land-grant university and donating 200acres of land and $500,000 in cash. Cornell died in Ithaca on December 9, 1874.
The idea for a public statue honoring Ezra Cornell was put forth by students in 1906, with the idea of dedicating it on the centennial of Ezra's birth, but this idea did not come to fruition. In 1915, the Board of Trustees commissioned sculptor Hermon Atkins MacNeil to design a bronze statue honoring their university's namesake. MacNeil, a graduate of the Massachusetts Normal Art School, had taught art classes at Cornell in the 1880s, including "Industrial art" for the university's Sibley College. He had been hired by Robert H. Thurston, the dean of the mechanical engineering program at Cornell, who later encouraged MacNeil to further his training in Europe. The contract for the statue awarded to MacNeil was for $25,000. MacNeil worked on the statue between 1915 and 1917. Speaking later of the statue, MacNeil stated that its construction was a labor of love, because Ezra looked like his father. By 1918, work on the location for the statue was started, and in May, the foundation for the pedestal was placed between Morrill Hall and McGraw Hall. During this work, an old cistern, which used to be part of the university's water system, was uncovered.
The dedication celebrations for the statue was originally set to occur on October 8, 1918, with a military parade and procession to take place as part of semicentennial celebrations for the university. However, World War I caused these celebrations to be postponed. These celebrations were instead rescheduled to June 20–22, 1919, with the university's commencement to be held the day after these celebrations. The statue was officially unveiled on June 22, with Mary Cornell, Ezra's only living child, doing the unveiling. The year after the statue's dedication, images of the monument were displayed at an annual exhibition held by the Architectural League of New York.
Over the years, the statue has been the subject of occasional acts of vandalism.
The monument consists of a bronze statue of Cornell atop a red granite pedestal. The statue is 9feet tall, while the pedestal covers an area of 10feet by 8feet. The pedestal rests on a stone platform that covers an area of 50feet by 20feet. The pedestal is also surrounded by a granite bench which extends on either side of the statue along the length of 50feet. On the front of the pedestal is inscribed the following:
The statue depicts Cornell wearing a frock coat, with a wide-brimmed hat in his right hand, which is resting on a walking cane. His left hand rests on a base, on top of which is the charter for the university. At the bottom of this base is an oak sprig. Behind Cornell is a Morse telegraph. Cornell faces across the quad, and the statue is located across the quad from a statue of Andrew Dickson White.