Statue of Samuel Spencer explained

Samuel Spencer statue
Designer:Henry Bacon
Daniel Chester French
Dedicated To:Samuel Spencer
Dedicated:May 21, 1910
Location:1200 Peachtree Street
Atlanta, Georgia
Fabricator:Piccirilli Brothers
Coordinates:33.7879°N -84.3839°W

The Samuel Spencer statue is a public monument in Atlanta, Georgia. Dedicated in 1910, the monument was designed by Daniel Chester French, Henry Bacon, and the Piccirilli Brothers and honors Samuel Spencer, a railroad executive who died in 1906. The statue, initially located in front of Atlanta's Terminal Station, was moved several times over the next several decades and is today located in front of Norfolk Southern's headquarters in midtown Atlanta.

History

Samuel Spencer was a railroad executive who served as the first president of Southern Railway,[1] which eventually became Norfolk Southern Railway.[2] He died in the early morning of Thanksgiving 1906 in a train wreck.[3] Following this, over 30,000 employees of the Southern Railway donated money to commission a statue honoring their late president. The statue was designed by Henry Bacon, Daniel Chester French, and the Piccirilli Brothers and was unveiled on May 21, 1910, in front of Terminal Station in Atlanta, Georgia. Five years after this statue's unveiling, these individuals would again collaborate on the statue of Abraham Lincoln at the Lincoln Memorial, which also features a seated figure.[4]

The statue was initially located near the front entrance of Terminal Station, where it would remain until the station closed in June 1970. Following this, the statue was moved several times to locations throughout Atlanta.[5] On July 3, 1970, the statue was rededicated outside of Peachtree station in the Brookwood neighborhood of Atlanta. It remained there until May 1996, when, in preparation for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, the statue was moved to Hardy Ivy Park in downtown Atlanta. The monument was moved for a third and final time on May 30, 2009, to a plaza in front of Norfolk Southern's offices, located along Peachtree Street in midtown Atlanta.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Blair. Ruth. Ruth Blair. October 1940. Atlanta's Monuments. Atlanta Historical Bulletin. Atlanta Historical Society. V. 23. 276–277. Atlanta History Center.
  2. Web site: Kelley. Collin. May 6, 2014. A Look Back: This month in Atlanta's history. August 11, 2020. Atlanta INtown. en-US.
  3. Web site: Russell. Lance. September 18, 2017. A familiar statue. August 11, 2020. Saporta Report. en-US.
  4. Web site: July 20, 2017. Peachtree's Presidential Statue. August 11, 2020. PBS.
  5. Web site: DeFeo. Todd. July 25, 2016. Five interesting statues to see in Georgia. August 11, 2020. Sightseers' Delight. en-US.