World War I Memorial on August 12, 2007
The Marion County World War I Memorial, features a bronze Doughboy statue called Over the Top to Victory, designed in 1920 by John Paulding and cast by the American Art Bronze Foundry of Chicago. The statue is one of only two known Paulding Doughboys depicted holding a grenade.
World War I Memorial on August 12, 2007
This monument was originally placed in front of the Marion County Courthouse in 1924. The original inscription reads as follows:
THEIR COUNTRY’S CALL
ANSWERED
SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF
MARION COUNTY
WHO MADE THE SUPREME SACRIFICE
IN THE
WORLD WAR
1914-1918
“GREATER LOVE HATH NO MAN.”
John 15:13
World War I Memorial on August 12, 2007
The monument carries a list of Marion County residents who lost their lives in World War I. Here is the list, in the order they are listed on the monument (the first two columns are on one side, the next two on the other side, and the last column is on the back):
WILHELM E. AHLGREN | JAMES E. GARDNER |
JOSEPH A. MARTIN |
ARCHIE D. ROBERTS |
CHAS. AUER
PERRY W. BALDWIN
IVAN E. BELLINGER
HENRY T. BENNETT
JOHN LOU CASTEEL
GARRIE R. DWIRE
WILLIAM A. GUERNE
MILTON A. KOOREMAN
PAUL A. LORENZ
HARRY MASON
SIMON B. SPRINGER
CHESTER A. SIMMONS
THOMAS R. TOWNSEND
CURTIS W. WILLSON
GUS. ZOLLNER
OSCAR ZIMMERMAN
World War I Memorial on August 12, 2007
The monument was moved here in 1991 and rededicated on May 18, 1991. The rededication plaque reads as follows:
DOUGHBOY STATUE REDEDICATION
MAY 18, 1991
BARBARA ROBERTS
GOVERNOR
JON MANGIS ORVILLE A. RUMMEL
DIRECTOR, DEPARTMENT PAST COMMANDER
OF VETERANS’ AFFAIRS VETERAN WORLD WAR I
World War I Memorial Rededication Plaque on August 12, 2007
Another Paulding Doughboy of a different design is in Astoria, Oregon.
For more information about the Paulding doughboy statues: John Paulding’s Doughboys at Earl D. Goldsmith’s E.M. Viquesney Doughboy Database
Additional Links:
Doughboy Memorial at Discover-Neighborhood-History
World War I Plaque on August 12, 2007
Adjacent to the World War I memorial is another pedestal with a plaque from the Veterans of World War I of the USA carrying the poem In Flanders Fields. The poem was written by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, M.D. of the Canadian Army on May 13, 1915. It refers to fields in Flanders, Belgium where war casualties were buried. Here is the text of the plaque:
WORLD WAR I
APRIL 6, 1917 – NOVEMBER 11, 1918
IN FLANDERS FIELDS
IN FLANDERS FIELD THE POPPIES GROW
BETWEEN THE CROSSES, ROW ON ROW,
THAT MARKS OUR PLACE; IN THE SKY
THE LARKS, STILL BRAVELY SINGING, FLY
SCARCE HEARD AMONG THE GUNS BELOW.
WE ARE THE DEAD. SHORT DAYS AGO
WE LIVED, FELT DAWN, SAW SUNSET GLOW,
LOVED AND WERE LOVED, AND NOW WE LIE
IN FLANDERS FIELDS.
TAKE UP OUR QUARREL WITH THE FOE;
TO YOU FROM FAILING HANDS WE THROW
THE TORCH; BE YOURS TO HOLD IT HIGH.
IF YE BREAK FAITH WITH US WHO DIE
WE SHALL NOT SLEEP, THOUGH POPPIES GROW
IN FLANDERS FIELDS.
Continue to 14B: Spanish-American War Memorial…
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