Home | Lee, Robert Edward
- CountryUS
- Town:MD Baltimore
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Year of creation:1948
- Rider(s):Lee, Robert Edward
(1807–1870), a top graduate of the United States Military Academy who distinguished himself as an exceptional officer in the US army for 32 years. When Virginia declared its secession from the Union, Lee chose to follow his home state, despite his personal desire for the Union to stay intact and despite the fact that President Abraham Lincoln had offered Lee command of the Union Army. He soon emerged as a shrewd tactician and battlefield commander, winning numerous battles against larger Union forces.
Many military historians have praised Lee’s abilities as a tactician, but his strategic vision was more doubtful. Both of his invasions of the North ended in defeat and he surrendered to Grant in 1865. As Lee was the commanding officer of all the Confederate forces, the remaining armies soon also capitulated. Lee rejected the idea of starting of a guerrilla campaign against the North, and called for reconciliation between the North and the South. He became the great Southern hero of the Civil War, a post-war icon of the ‘Lost Cause of the Confederacy’ to some. His popularity grew, even in the North, and especially after his death in 1870.
- Sculptor(s):Fraser, Laura Gardin
(1889–1966) was an American sculptor and the wife of sculptor James Earle Fraser. Although recognized principally for her medallic contributions, Laura won outstanding commissions to do heroic-size sculpture. Most distinguished was her winning the competition to do the double equestrian statue of Generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson in Baltimore. The competition was held in 1936 and six eminent American sculptors were invited to submit designs.
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Description:
In Baltimore, we find a statue of Lee with his favourite general, Jackson. A detail worth mentioning is the fact that the sculptor ‘expresses her appreciation to the Gorham factory which abided by its pre-war agreement in casting the statue to its own intrinsic loss’.
A memorial ceremony is held annually, with music, a march, a pledge of allegiance to the US flag, a salute to the Confederate flag, a benediction by a chaplain and so on. ‘The Sons of the Confederate veterans and the United Daughters of the Confederacy’ organize this ceremony.
This statue has been removed in 2017.