Doughboy Foundation Home
transition01.jpg
transition03.jpg
Belvedere-Stone-View-3.jpg
Belvedere-to-Sculpture.jpg
Belvedere-Stone-View-1.jpg
Rendering-2.jpg
Rendering-3A.jpg
Rendering-4.jpg
Rendering-5.jpg
Terrace-Planters2.jpg
_P3_3855_250118-Edit_250118.jpg
_P3_3934_250118_250118.jpg
_P3_3941_250118_250118.jpg
previous arrow
next arrow

Monuments & Memorials

"The centennial of World War One offers an opportunity for people in the United States
to learn about and commemorate the sacrifices of their predecessors."

from The World War One Centennial Commission Act, January 14, 2013

DCWorldWarMonumen 1World War One was a watershed in American history. The United States' decision to join the battle in 1917 "to make the world safe for democracy" proved pivotal in securing allied victory — a victory that would usher in the American Century.

In the war's aftermath, individuals, towns, cities, counties, and states all felt compelled to mark the war, as did colleges, businesses, clubs, associations, veterans groups, and houses of worship. Thousands of memorials—from simple honor rolls, to Doughboy sculptures, to grandiose architectural ensembles—were erected throughout the US in the 1920s and 1930s, blanketing the American landscape.

Each of these memorials, regardless of size or expense, has a story. But sadly, as we enter the war's centennial period, these memorials and their very purpose—to honor in perpetuity the more than four million Americans who served in the war and the more than 116,000 who were killed—have largely been forgotten. And while many memorials are carefully tended, others have fallen into disrepair through neglect, vandalism, or theft. Some have been destroyed. Watch this CBS news video on the plight of these monuments.

The extant memorials are our most salient material links in the US to the war. They afford a vital window onto the conflict, its participants, and those determined to remember them. Rediscovering the memorials and the stories they tell will contribute to their physical and cultural rehabilitation—a fitting commemoration of the war and the sacrifices it entailed.

Memorial Hunters Club

We are building a US WW1 Memorial register through a program called the Memorials Hunters Club. If you locate a memorial that is not on the map we invite you to upload your treasure to be permanently archived in the national register.  You can include your choice of your real name, nickname or team name as the explorers who added that memorial to the register. We even have room for a selfie! Check the map, and if you don't see the your memorial CLICK THE LINK TO ADD IT.

100 Cities - 100 Memorials

Filters
Geolocalisation bp
  • Dedication Date: May 30, 1925
500 W Front Ave
58504 Bismarck
ND
USA

This granite marker on the original alignment of the Memorial Highway in Bismarck was sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary, Lloyd Spetz Unit No. 1 and dedicated on May 30, 1925. The Memorial Highway is a four-mile stretch from the intersection of Front St. and Washington St. in Bismarck west to the intersection of Main Ave. and Memorial Highway in Mandan. The four mile stretch is the area that was specifically named as a memorial for WWI.

  • Single figure -- soldier

Memorial Honor Roll World War I

A bronze eagle with wings spread sits atop a 24 foot tall column of polished granite. Beneath is a three section base of unpolished granite with a plaque bearing the names of the 52 Ottawa County men who fought in WW1.

Place des États-Unis
75016 Paris
Île-de-France
France

On 4 July 1923, the President of the French Council of StateRaymond Poincaré, dedicated this monument in the Place des États-Unis to the Americans who had volunteered to fight in World War I in the service of France. The monument, in the form of a bronze statue on a plinth, executed by Jean Boucher (1870–1939), was financed through a public subscription.  Boucher used a photograph of the soldier and poet, Alan Seeger, as his inspiration, and Seeger's name can be found, among those of twenty-three others who had fallen in the ranks of the French Foreign Legion, on the back of the plinth. Also, on either side of the base of the statue, are two excerpts from Seeger's "Ode in Memory of the American Volunteers Fallen for France", a poem written shortly before his death on 4 July 1916. Seeger intended that his words should be read in Paris on 30 May of that year, at an observance of the American holiday, Decoration Day (later known as Memorial Day):

Yet sought they neither recompense nor praise,
Nor to be mentioned in another breath,
Than their blue coated comrades whose great days
It was their pride to share—ay, share even to the death!   [...]

Hail, brothers, and farewell; you are twice blest, brave hearts.
Double your glory is who perished thus,
For you have died for France and vindicated us

  • Memorial Hunters Club Submission: thewanderer
  • 1926
70802 Baton Rouge
LA
USA

The Memorial Oak Grove was dedicated on March 12, 1926 to honor the 30 LSU men who lost their lives in the war. Thirty-one live oak trees were planted, one for each of the fallen and one for an unknown soldier, as a living reminder of their sacrifice and service to the country.

Plans have been in the works to improve the landscaping and to provide an educational component to tell the story of those who are memorialized, the grove itself, and the war.

1800 Airport Blvd
36606 Mobile
AL
USA
  • Dedication Date: 1924
Main & Franklin Streets
08520 Hightstown
NJ
USA

The lakeside Hightstown Memorial Park was dedicated on Armistice Day 1924, the result of a community fund drive to raise $25,000 to honor its veterans, following a $30,000 gift of the land by six local donors.  A concrete dam, stone retaining walls, a walkway across the dam, a boat landing with steps & grading & landscaping were created.

Situated near the boat landing, a granite obelisk was placed by the American Legion Post #148 & the VFW Post 5700.  The monument is dedicated to all who served in World War I.  

Narrative adapted from "Reflections from the Shrine" by John W. Orr, Jr., 1998. 

Vintage photo courtesy of:  Rutgers University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives 

  • Memorial Hunters Club Submission: Memorial Hunter: Weydan Flax
51st St and Memorial Drive
74145 Tulsa
OK
USA
  • Park
  • Dedication Date: November 11, 1921
  • November 11, 1921
San Juan Island
WA
USA
  • Memorial Hunters Club Submission: Robert Shay, PH3, USNR-R, 1964-70
Agudas Achim Cemetery
43207 Columbus
OH
USA

This Memorial Monument is located in the Old Congregation Agudas Achim Jewish Cemetery, approximate address: 1707 Alum Creek Drive, Columbus, OH

Based on the logo at the top, this Monument was put up by Capitol Post 122, Jewish War Veterans of the U.S., Columbus, OH.

The cemetery was opened on August 28, 1891 and became full and inactive when new cemetery was opened in 1952.

The first four, 1918, entries on the monument were KIA or Died of wounds.  The next three, 1919, died of disease or wounds after the Armistice. The remaining names are of WWI veterans.  It appears that someone was keeping track and when that person died in 1938 no more names were added.

  • Memorial Hunters Club Submission: Debbie Blaske
1200 North Telegraph, Bldg 12 East
48341 Pontiac
MI
USA

This plaque was purchased and placed by the General Richardson Chapter, National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, in the courthouse in Pontiac, MI in 1921. When the courthouse was torn down in 1962, the plaque went into storage. After the construction of the new courthouse, the plaque was reinstalled and rededicated on November 10, 1977, by the General Richardson Chapter. Plans are underway to move the plaque to an outdoor location at the courthouse and the rededication will be help hopefully in November of 2018. The General Richardson Chapter is now the Stoney Creek Chapter, NSDAR, based in Rochester, MI.

108 W Dallas Ave
36701 Selma
AL
USA
World Wars Memorial
  • Dedication Date: 1925
47803 Terre Haute
IN
USA
Now home to Indiana State University football games, the foundation for the stadium began after World War I, when city planners conceived of a stadium as a memorial to veterans. The entrance is modeled after the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, France. Construction was completed in 1925, and is located at 3300 Wabash Ave, Terre Haute, IN 47803.

Information submitted by: Mary Creamer, Fort Harrison Chapter DAR 
  • Dedication Date: October 8, 1927
2nd Ave N and Columbia Rd
58202 Grand Forks
ND
USA

The Memorial Stadium on the University of North Dakota campus was designed by Walter H. Wheeler of Minneapolis and built in 1927 as a memorial to those from the UND community who died in World War I. The funds for this "fortress" were raised through student pledges, donations from alumni, businesses, and other friends of the university with a capacity to seat 10,634. Governor Sorlie spoke at the dedication on October 8, 1927 just before the homecoming game.

1402 South 1st Street
61820 Champaign
IL
USA

Memorial Stadium was built in 1923 to honor University of Illinois men and women who gave their lives serving in World War I. There are a total of 200 columns on the east and west sides of the stadium. 183 columns display one name of a University of Illinois student that lost their lives in the first war (182 men and 1 woman).  In addition, carved stone panels were placed on the facility's exterior to commemorate the war and to honor athletic achievements.  In 2002, the stadium dedication was extended to those who died in World War II. The stadium was officially dedicated on October 18, 1924, on which the university football team played a homecoming game against the University of Michigan. On way to a 39–14 Illini victory, Red Grange scored five touchdowns in one of the greatest single-game performances in football history.

200 Oak Street S.E., Suite 100 Minneapolis, MN 55455
55414 Minneapolis
MN
USA

The largest memorial to those Minnesotans who died in World War I no longer exists, except for a preserved fragment and an impressive website that thoroughly documents its nearly ninety-year history.

  • Memorial Hunters Club Submission: Lori
1101 Maine St
66045 Lawrence
KS
USA
Built in 1920 as a memorial to KU students who died in service during WW1. Located on the University of Kansas campus.
  • Plaque or tablet
Calvert County
Prince Frederick
MD
USA

Left Side of Statue:

The soldiers and sailors from Calvert County who lost their lives in the World War

George Armiger

Solomon Barnes

Wm T Dorsey

Arick L Lore

William Marquess

Thoms J Osborne

Reuben P Pitcher

Murray A Sherbert

Irving R Stallings

Harry Sunderland

Charles W. Tongue

Right Side of Statue:

Three hundred and fifteen patriots from the county answered the call for liberty and humanity

Alonza Brown

James Butler

Wallace Curtis

John Cross

Thornton Gormon

Joseph S. Jones

Benjamin Kent 

  • W.A. Sharp
  • Dedication Date: August 2, 1920

Memorial Tablet at Victory Memorial Grove

100 Cities / 100 Memorials

100c 100m wwi centennial plaque Victory Memorial Grove, a 5-acre park within Elysian Park in Los Angeles, was established in 1920 as a World War I memorial with the planting of trees and a field of Flanders Poppies.  It contains a bronze memorial tablet set into a 2-ton granite boulder, dedicated in 1921 to honor the 22 individuals who gave their lives during the Great War.  The monument was restored and rededicated in June 2017.  

SR 207 and SR 87
06247 Lebanon
CT
USA

The Memorial to Five Wars, dedicated in 1922, is located in the center of Lebanon Green, in front of the Town Hall and across the street from the First Congregational Church. It consists of a cobblestone pedestal supporting a tall flagpole. A bronze plaque is recessed into each face of the pedestal.  Three of the four 30" x 20" bronze plaques carry lettering relating to the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Civil War, the Spanish-American War, and World War I. The lettering is in thoughtful narrative form, quite different from the standard memorial language often found on such plaques.  The fourth plaque is a bas-relief by Bruce Wilder Saville depicting a composite of three soldiers, one from the Revolutionary War, one from the Civil War, and one from World War I, and a flag. The figure to the group's far right is from the Revolutionary War; he carries a musket on his shoulder. The central figure is a doughboy from World War I; he uses both hands to grasp his rifle. The third man is in Civil War uniform; he carries the colors. The flag opens out above the three soldiers; its staff continues to the group's left on the diagonal to the upper left corner of the plaque, distorting the right angle of the corner as the tip of the pole continues upward. A bronze plaque on a stone slab at the northeast corner of the Green lists names of those from Lebanon who served in World War I and World War II.

  • Memorial Hunters Club Submission: Gene Carlson
103 North St
47920 Battle Ground
IN
USA
A total of 79 men from Tippecanoe Township in Tippecanoe County, Indiana served their country during the First World War. Below are the names of those men inscribed on 3 faces of the memorial.

Inscription:

(South Side)
(With Drinking Fountain)

“MEMORIAL
TO THE
WORLD WAR
VETERANS OF
TIPPECANOE
TOWNSHIP
1917 - 1918”




(East Side)
Raymond D. Baker
Alva Beaven
Norman E. Beeker
Samuel T. Beeker
Dr. Frank M. Biddle
Frederick W. Boetel
Clarence R. Booth
Horace H. Booth
Jesse I. Booth
Max Eller Booth
Charles P. Brown
Dawson C. Brown
Floyd E. Brown
Nelson S. Boyd
Henry Clifton Bryan
William Earl Bryan
Leslie D. Bryant
Walter E. Burkhardt
Joseph A. Buskirk
J. Evert Buck
Royal I. Clinger
Samuel H. Cochran
Aubert A. Condit
John Francis Cowger
Charles M. Donly
Lawrence J. Eylens

(North Side)
David C. Fisher
Donald D. Fisher
John A. Galey
Harry W. Hampton
Almon O. Harshman
Howard C. Henderson
Harry J. Hollcraft
Roger Hurst
Hubert T. Jackson
Wilbur S. Jackson
Bert Jennings
Claude Jolly
Roy E. Jolly
Albert C. Jones
Harry Kaufman
Leo C. Kelly
Harold G. Kolb
Lawrence F. Lank
Robert J. Lank
George A. Leibenguth
James Elwood Maxwell
Lillian D. Mahin
Elmer L. Martin
William M. Martin
Marion Paul Mitchell
Clarence C. Mullendore
Ivan D. Nice

(West Side)
Carl E. Overly
William L. Owens
Henry E. Pauley
Ivan Pauley
Harry C. Pierce
Vere Ransdell
Sherman K. Ridgway
B. Collie Ridgway
John N. Rosser
Gilbert E. Rowe
Joseph F. Royer
Russel C. Shigley
James Shoup
Clarence R. Smith
Evert F. Smith
Dewey W. Stackhouse
Roy C. Stretch
Lynn S. VanNatta
Minor VanSchepen
Roland L. VanScoyoc
Ross L. Watkins
Theodore Watkins
Roy Lee Wilson
Clinton A. Withrow
Arthur Ray Wright
Earl Zeibler