About the Marine Corps War Memorial
Memorial Day is just around the corner and as you may know it’s a day of remembering the men and women who died while serving in the United States Armed Forces. A few facts you may not know about the Marine Corps War Memorial:
The 32-foot-high sculpture of the Marine Corps Memorial was inspired by a Pulitzer Prize winning photograph clicked by Joe Rosenthal.
The bronze monument was designed by Felix W. De Weldon and dedicated by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1954, on the occasion of the 179th anniversary of the Marine Corps.
The bronze statue of the memorial is said to be the largest in the world.
While the statue was being designed, the three surviving soldiers of the war from the photographs posed for the sculptor.
Casting the bronze took three years and the statue was transported to Washington D.C in a dozen pieces and then bolted and welded together.
The memorial is 78 feet tall, and the rifles are 12 and 16 feet long.
The figures in the Marine Corp Memorial statue hold a 60-foot bronze flagpole from which a cloth flag flies all through the day.