INSCRIPTION
The inscription at the top of the arch reads:
Erected AD 1919 by the people of this the Ninth
Ward in honor of its citizens who were enlisted in combative service and in
memory of those who made the supreme sacrifice for the triumph of right over
might in the Great World War.
Erected AD 1919 by the people of this the Ninth Ward in honor of its citizens who were enlisted in combative service and in memory of those who made the supreme sacrifice for the triumph of right over might in the Great World War.
DESCRIPTION
Designed by Charles Lawhon and built in Buff Bedford Indiana Limestone
by the prestigious Albert Weiblen Marble and Granite Company, the arch is
dedicated to more the 1,300 men and one woman from the Ninth Ward who saw
service in the American Expeditionary Force during World War I.
The Ninth Ward Army and Navy Aid had the task of raising the necessary funds
for the memorial and reportedly had difficulties raising them. Nevertheless,
the $7,800 needed to build the arch was achieved, and no funds were sought
outside of the ward. This was due to the fundraising efforts of Dr. Edward
S. Kelley, member of the local board No. Eight.
Purported to be the first permanent Great War memorial in the United States,
the Victory Arch architectural plans had been completed by March 1919, and
the construction completed by early 1920, and the entire memorial dedicated
on March 14, 1920. According to the Times-Picayune, six thousand people
attended the memorial dedication, including one thousand school children
from the ward, who sang "Call of the Flag," the "Star Spangled Banner," and
"America".
Speakers included Colonel E. D. A. Pearce, Commander of Jackson Barracks,
Captain George F. Cooper, commandant of the naval station, Senator George
Theole, president of the Ninth Ward Army and Navy Club, Morris B. DePass,
chairman of the ward committee, who formally presented the arch to the city,
and Commissioner E J Glenny, who filled in for the ailing mayor. Taps was
sounded for the 48 former residents who had died in ser-vice, and Red Cross
Nurse Frances Fabing, also a resident of the Ninth Ward. was presented with
a bouquet of roses and carnations (Times-Picayune, March 7,1920; March
15,1920).
There are four bronze plaques, each listing the names of the men who were in
service in the American Expeditionary Force. The plaque on the left leg of
the arch facing Burgundy Street lists the white men who were killed in
action and who died in service. Beneath these names are the names of the
residents of the Ninth Ward who were enlisted but still living. The list
continues on the plaques on the front and rear of the right leg of the arch.
The list of the African-American service men who died in service, as well as
those who were still living, are on the rear of the left leg of the arch.
Originally, the arch was located in the middle of the square, circled by a
paved walkway. In 1951, the Victory Arch was moved to the periphery of the
square to a banquette on Burgundy St. to make way for the new high school.
During the subsequent 35 years, the arch fell into disrepair. Some pieces
broke off and are now lost forever.
In 1985, members of the BNA got together and restored the arch, removing
graffiti and stains and cleaning and sealing the limestone. In 1994, the
residents of the 3800 block of Burgundy "adopted" the grounds around the
arch. In late 2002 and early 2003, the Monumental Task Committee restored
the Victory Arch, due much in part to the generous efforts of Ms. Judy
Burns.
The blueprints in the Southeastern Architectural Archives at Tulane
University, dated March 1919, indicate that the carved shields above each
plaque were to have inscribed crosses. An early model of the arch also
indicates that the rear of the arch was to have a different inscription
above the pediment, as well as two flanking bas-reliefs of Liberty.
Click here for more information on the Victory Arch.
Click on thumbnails to see larger images.
