Memorial Inventory Project: There is one other existing partial database to consult - The WWI Memorial Inventory Project [CLICK HERE]. It contains some memorials our map doesn't. The listings on this database are fair game for the Memorial Hunters Club. So if you want to search for treasure from your desk - find missing listings here and submit them. Remember though, you will need to come up with pictures and the history of the memorial. You might be able to hunt that down through www.Proquest.com and Google.
White granite monument - Sponsored by Cherokee Garden Club 1949.
Inscription: “Honoring all who served and dedicated to the memory of those from Mitchell County who made the supreme sacrifice for the freedom of all men from oppression.”
Individual names are inscribed, but appear faded and are unreadable in the photographs.
"Poppy Lady" - Moina Bell Michael - (b) August 15, 1869, Originator of the Flandersfield Memorial Poppy - November 9, 1918 - Erected By The Georgia Department, American Legion - American Legion Auxiliary 1937.
The Georgia General Assembly designated U.S. Highway 78 from Monroe to Athens, through Walton, Oconee and Clarke counties as the “Moina Michael Highway” in honor of the originator of wearing the memorial poppy for Veterans Day. Michael was born near Monroe and was a faculty member at the University of Georgia.
The Georgia Department of Transportation has planted beds of memorial poppies along the median of the highway to bloom in the springs of 2017 and 2018 as part of the observance of Georgia’s role in World War I.
Moina Michael – State Historical Marker / Good Hope
Details
near Good Hope Church on Ga. Highway 83
30641
Good Hope
GA
USA
Erected in 1958 near Good Hope Church on Ga. Highway 83, it is inscribed, “Moina Michael, educator, patriot, and internationally known as ‘The Poppy Lady,’ was born near here August 15, 1869. A granite boulder marks her birthplace. She received her early education at Braswell Academy and at Martin Institute, Jefferson, Georgia. Her first teaching was in a log cabin on her father’s plantation and in an old store at Good Hope. Miss Michael’s inspiration for the Flanders Field Poppy as the memorial emblem came to her November 9, 1918, just before Armistice Day, while she was serving with the YMCA in New York. From the sale of poppies made by disabled veterans in hospitals, millions of dollars are realized annually for their aid. Miss Michael died May 10, 1944, and is buried in Monroe, Ga.
A small plaque in memory of Moina Michael (1869-1944), originator of the idea of the memorial poppy in honor of Armistice (later Veterans) Day. It is in a small park in the median of Broad Street directly in front of the UGA Arch, adjacent to the Confederate memorial monument.
The Moline World War I memorial was dedicated in 1929. Around a flagpole is a sculpture by C.S. Paolo consisting of a circular grouping of bronze figures. The figures include a soldier, an angel of glory, an angel of mourning, a boy, and father time. Another angel stands behind holding a semicircular garland.
“Dedicated to all Monroe Countians who served our country and in memory of those who made the supreme sacrifice. They died that others may live free. Erected 2010 by the citizens of Monroe County.”
The World War I “Honor Roll” monument contains thirteen names.
Memorial Hunters Club Submission: Alexander Palmieri
610 Monroe Turnpike
06468
Monroe
CT
USA
This monument in the Monroe Green is a boulder honoring World War I veterans and was dedicated in 1931. A plaque on the monuments south face, measuring 17" wide by 22" tall, bears the dedication "In grateful recognition of the valor and devotion of the young men of this community who served in the world war for liberty and justice 1914-1919. The plaque lists 24 names and indicates that two were killed in the war.
Atop a triangular granite pedestal is a bronze eagle perched on a ball. On the pedestal is a relief showing soldiers boarding battleships with women and children watching from the docks, with a plane dropping bombs in the background. This is a tribute to the Ashland veterans of WWI and WWII. To each side of the monument are small granite markers honoring ihe veterans from the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
Montfaucon American Monument / Montfaucon-d'Argonne
Details
Rue d'Amerique at Rue Neuve
55270
Montfaucon-d'Argonne
Grand Est
France
The World War I Montfaucon American Monument, dedicated in 1937, is located seven miles south of the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery and Memorial and 20 miles northwest of Verdun, France. It consists of a massive granite doric column, surmounted by a statue symbolic of liberty, which towers more than 200-feet above the war ruins of the former village. It commemorates the American victory during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive during the period September 26, 1918 to November 11, 1918, when the American First Army forced the enemy to conduct a general retreat on this front. On the walls of the foyer are an engraved map of the operations with a narrative and a special tribute to the American troops who served here. The observation platform on top of the memorial is reached by 234 steps and affords magnificent views of this battlefield.
Montgomery County Soldiers and Sailors WWI Memorial / Clarksville
Details
Memorial Hunters Club Submission: The Wanderer
250 Arrowood Drive
37042
Clarksville
TN
USA
There have been few monuments in the history of Clarksville that have had as long a lifespan as the Doughboy. This statue of an American soldier holding a grenade in one hand, his rifle in the other, was dedicated to those who fought for the U.S. during World War I. It is one of Clarksville’s most beloved pieces of civic art.
Since its dedication in 1929, this statue has had an interesting existence. It has seen generations of Clarksville High School students grow up before its marble eyes. It has also been relocated around Clarksville several times.
According to The Leaf-Chronicle, the statue spent 43 years in front of Clarksville High School, before being moved to the armory on Ft. Campbell Boulevard in 1972.
On April 15, 2010, the Doughboy was rededicated in front of the Transit Station on Legion Street, in downtown Clarksville. Many descendants of World War I veterans were in attendance for the rededication ceremony, including the children of Alvin York, one of Tennessee’s most iconic World War I heroes.
In 2015, the Doughboy was relocated yet again to the Brigadier General Wendell H. Gilbert Tennessee State Veterans Home.
It was one of the few Doughboy statues of its type made out of stone. The Clarksville Doughboy is a rarity because it was sculpted from marble. Most of them were cast out of bronze. The inscription reads:
In honor of Montgomery County's Soldiers and Sailors, World War 1917-1918
World War I Doughboy
Dedicated June 9, 1929 Restored and re-dedicated by the City of Clarksville, April 15, 2010 To those who fell and those who served: Soldiers, Sailors, Marines and Airmen
Individual Contributors (List of those who contributed money to restore the monument)