Confederate Monument - Douglasville, GA
Posted by: YoSam.
N 33° 44.699 W 084° 43.843
16S E 710208 N 3736193
Statue now, notice pigeon on statue's head. He would not move, even when rocks were thrown...the pigeon not the soldier.
Waymark Code: WMYM2B
Location: Georgia, United States
Date Posted: 06/27/2018
Views: 0
County of monument: Douglas County
Location of monument: Hospital Dr. & Dorris Rd., courthouse lawn, Douglasville
Erected: 1914
Erected by: Douglasville Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy
Historic contributing structure on the old courthouse lawn. The old courthouse was built in 1958, and the new courthouse was finished in 1998. The statue was moved soon after the completion of the new courthouse.
"The district also includes the historic courthouse
square with its historic landscaping, 1914 Civil War monument,
non-historic World War II monument, and modern courthouse, and the
historic railroad right-of-way which parallels Broad Street through
the downtown district. The oldest historic resource in the district
is the county courthouse square, with its landscaping and Civil War
monument; ... " ~ NRHP Nomination Form
Monument Text:
(front):
1861
[bias relief of crossed swords]
1865
DOUGLAS
COUNTY
HEROES
(rear):
ERECTED BY
DOUGLASVILLE CHAPTER
UNITED DAUGHTERS
OF THE CONFEDERACY
1914
Proper Description: A young, uniformed Civil War soldier stands atop a tall, square pedestal, holding the barrel of his rifle with both hands at chest level, the stock resting by his proper right foot. The soldier is clean shaven and wears a field hat. Pouches are attached to the rear of his proper left waist, and a bedroll is slung over his proper left shoulder and secured at the proper right waist. The back of the soldier's proper right leg rests against a tree stump. The lower base is multitiered and stepped, adorned with a relief of crossed swords." ~ Smithsonian American Art Museum
Remarks: "The monument commemorates Confederate soldiers of Douglas County, Georgia, and was erected by the Douglasville Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC). For related information see Isabell Buzzett Smith's "Confederate Monuments of Georgia," Atlanta: Atlanta Chapter No. 18, United Daughters of the Confederacy, 1984" ~ Smithsonian American Art Museum