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The Prince Hall Monument is a granite monument in the Cambridge Common park in Cambridge, Massachusetts, completed in 2010. It memorializes Prince Hall, an abolitionist, civil rights activist, and leader in Boston's black community in the 1700s. The monument was made by Ted Clausen, a sculptor who has made other public artwork in Boston.
Robert Gould Shaw Memorial: African American Civil War Soldiers: Boston Common,Boston, MA: Augustus Saint-Gaudens: 1897 [1] Statue of Frederick Douglass: Frederick Douglass: Frederick Douglass Memorial Square, Rochester, NY. Sidney W. Edwards: 1899 Douglass & family lived in Rochester 25 years, he's buried in Rochester. Colored Soldiers ...
The Civil War Monument, also known as the Civil War Memorial [1] and Lincoln-Soldier Monument, [2] is installed in Cambridge Common, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. [3] The monument was completed in 1870 and was designed by artists Cyrus Cobb and Darius Cobb with supervising architect Thomas W. Silloway. McDonald & Mann were the ...
One of the relatively few monuments to black soldiers that participated in the American Civil War, 1924. Captain Andrew Offutt Monument, Lebanon, 1921. Confederate-Union Veterans' Monument, Morgantown at the Butler County Courthouse, 1907. 32nd Indiana Monument, near Munfordville. The oldest surviving memorial to the Civil War, 1862.
Monuments and memorials in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. Pages in category "Monuments and memorials in Cambridge, Massachusetts" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
This site was the home and farm of Paul Cuffee (1759–1817), a wealthy colonial-era African-American merchant. Cuffee was a leading advocate for minority rights in Massachusetts, and a promoter and funder of the resettlement of African-Americans to present-day Sierra Leone. [36] 31: Caleb Cushing House: Caleb Cushing House: November 7, 1973
Walls and his family stayed in Canada after the American Civil War. [11] Queen's Bush – Mapleton. [1] Beginning in 1820, African American pioneers settled in the open lands of Queen's Bush. More than 1,500 blacks set up farms and created a community with churches and Mount Pleasant and Mount Hope schools, which were taught by American ...
Public artworks in Cambridge, Massachusetts have included: Civil War Monument; The End of the Red Line; Galaxy: Earth Sphere, Kendall Square; Gift of the Wind; Glove Cycle, by Mags Harries, Porter Square MBTA Station; Igor Fokin memorial sculpture [1] Irish Famine Memorial, Cambridge Common; Prince Hall Monument, Cambridge Common; Statue of ...