Monument, memorial, sites of slavery
Contemporary Monuments to the Slave Past documents a range of monuments, memorials, and sites of slavery. Here are a few definitions to guide you through the commemorative works you will encounter in the digital repository.
Monument
Lorain Underground Station 100 Monument, 2006, Lorain, Ohio. Photo by Geoffrey Jacobson.
- A statue, building, or other structure erected to commemorate a famous or notable person or event.
- A statue or other structure erected in memory of the dead, either over the grave or in a church, etc.
- A structure, edifice, or site of historical interest or importance.[2]
Monuments mark specific events, persons, and actions as worthy of remembrance. They often demonstrate power and authority, and assert abstract values perceived as universal (for example, the ideals of freedom). They educate us about past events, persons, and actions singled out as important. Monuments are built with materials that are long-lasting such as bronze, steel, granite, and marble. Created to signify a sense of permanence, monuments honor some noteworthy aspect of the past.[3]
The Lorain Underground Station 100 Monument in Lorain, Ohio, is a monument that honors Black and white abolitionists and freedom seekers in Ohio. It marks the Underground Railroad as worthy of remembering. On the banks of the Black River (which empties into Lake Erie), the Underground Railroad station in Lorain was an important last stop in the United States before the formerly enslaved boarded schooners and sailed for Leamington, Pelee's Point, and other Canadian port towns across the lake. The monument made of granite, contains a bronze bas-relief that depicts a Black family walking to freedom.
Memorial
Ed Hamilton, “Spirit of Freedom”: African American Civil War Memorial, 1998, Washington, DC. Photo by Renée Ater.
- A memorial is something by which the memory of a person, thing, or event is preserved, as a monument, a custom, or an observance.[1]
Memorials are associated with acknowledging and paying tribute to the dead, and with ongoing activities related to the expression of grief and mourning. People come to memorials to remember the deceased often in the context of religious holidays, designated memorial days, and acknowledgment days related to individuals and historic moments.
Ed Hamilton's Spirit of Freedom recognizes the United States Colored Troops who fought in the Civil War for the Union Army and Navy. The bronze sculpture on a pink granite base pays tribute to their committments and sacrifices. Ongoing memorial activities take place at the site including ceremonies on President's Day (third Monday in February), Memorial Day (last Monday in May), June 19 (Juneteenth--Emancipation Day), and July 4 (Independence Day).
Sites of Slavery
Whitney Plantation with slave cabins and sugar kettles, Edgard, Louisiana. Photograh by Renée Ater.
Sites of slavery refer to “historical figures, objects, texts, and places that commemorate enslaved African Americans, formally remember American slavery, and thereby by democratize U.S. memory. . . . sites of slavery provide tangible links between present-day Americans and American chattal slavery.”[4]
The Whitney Plantation in Edgard, Louisiana, is a site of slavery. Founded in 2014 as a museum, the Whitney Plantation educates the public about the history of slavery in Louisiana and the brutal production of sugar along the Mississippi River, between New Orleans and Baton Rouge. The historic plantation complex comprises twelve historic structures including the main house, slave cabins, and outbuildings. This site of slavery also includes several memorials: The Field of Angels, The Wall of Honor, Allées Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, and The Children of Whitney, a series of figurative sculptures set in the landscape.
Two More Definitions
Commemorative Work
BuMann, Sharon, Jerry Rescue Monument, 1990, Syracuse, New York. Photo by Renée Ater.
Commemorative works is a broad term, used to include statues, monuments, sculpture, plaques, structures, and such sites as cemeteries, gardens, and built environments. Designed to be permanent, commemorative works are commissioned to evoke the memory of an individual, group, historic event, or other significant element in history such as slavery.
Annual events or important anniversaries also help to define the commemorative work. Civic ceremonies including wreath layings, re-enactments, remembrance days, and name acknowledgments serve to keep communities/stakeholders engaged with the commemorative work and aid in new meanings being created.
The Jerry Rescue Monument commemorates the rescue of William “Jerry” Henry, an escaped slave and cooper residing in Syracuse, New York, on October 1, 1851, by a group of anti-slavery activists. Heralded as one of the significant wins of the abolitionist movement, the monument recognizes Henry and the white abolitionists in a burst of figures emerging from the bronze relief.
Public Art
Marc Andre Robinson, Frederick Douglass, 2006, Baltimore, Maryland. Photo from Monument City, Flicker.
Art created for public space, usually outside, through a public process and funded through public funds. Public art is meant to last (longevity) and is created for the general public/audience/ community. Most of the monuments and memorials in the database can be considered public art.
"Today, public art can take a wide range of forms, sizes, and scales—and can be temporary or permanent. It often interprets the history of the place, its people, and perhaps addresses a social or environmental issue. Public art can include murals, sculpture, memorials, integrated architectural or landscape architectural work, community art, digital new media, and even performances and festivals!"[5]
Located in Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park in Fells Point (Baltimore), the colossal bronze head of Frederick Douglass by Marc Andre Robinson is a permanent piece of public art. The Living Classroom Foundation commissioned the head to honor Douglass who was enslaved in the Fells Point area from 1826 to 1838. Douglass fled Baltimore on September 3, 1838, traveling through Philadelphia and New York City to New Bedford, Massachusetts, where he found freedom as a newly self-emancipated man.
Works Cited
[1]"Memorial, Oxford English Dictionary, https://www.oed.com/.
[2]"Monument," Oxford English Dictionary, https://www.oed.com/.
[3]See Marita Sturken, "Monuments," in Enyclopedia of Aesthetics, edited by Michael Kelly (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).
[4]Salamishah Tillet, Sites of Slavery: Citizenship and Racial Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Imagination (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2012), 4-5.
[5]"Public Art," Americans for the Arts, https://www.americansforthearts.org/by-topic/public-art.
Written by Renée Ater, updated August 2024.