Captain Nathan Hale Monument - Coventry, CT
Posted by: Groundspeak Charter Member neoc1
N 41° 46.068 W 072° 18.385
18T E 723894 N 4627502
An obelisk monument erected to the memory of Captain Nathan Hale is located in the Nathan Hale Town Cemetery, 120 Lake Street, Coventry, CT.
Waymark Code: WM11BPC
Location: Connecticut, United States
Date Posted: 09/23/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member razalas
Views: 2

Sources:
Connecticut Monuments: Link
Smithsonian Art Inventory: Link
Wikipedia: Link

A 45' high obelisk consists of a granite base and shaft. The base has four tiered stages leading up to the shaft. Each face of the shaft is decorated with a row of three wreaths under a low gabled pediment. The pediment features the Egyptian symbolic decoration of a disc flanked by long horizontal wings. The obelisk was erected in 1846. The architect was Henry Austin and the contractor was Solomon Willard. Inscriptions appear on each face of the shaft.

The east front face is inscribed:

CAPTAIN
NATHAN HALE,
1776

The north face is inscribed:

Born at Coventry
June 6, 1755

The south face is inscribed:

Died at New York
Sept. 22, 1776

The west face is inscribed with his famous last words:

I only regret
that I have but one life
to lose
for my country.

Nathan Hale was born in Coventry, Connecticut on June 6, 1755. He attended Yale University and graduated in 1773. In 1775, he joined a Connecticut militia as a first lieutenant. After the battle of Long Island in, August 1776, Washington retreated to Manhattan. He desperately needed information on British troop movements. On September 8, 1776, Captain Nathan Hale volunteered to go behind enemy lines to obtain the information and report back to General Washington.

He was secretly ferried into Long Island. Subsequently, lower Manhattan was captured by the British and Washington fled to Harlem Heights. Hale was captured in Flushing Bay, Queens and brought to Manhattan where, on September 22, 1776, twenty-one year old Nathan Hale was hanged as a spy. In 1985, he was officially designated the state hero of Connecticut.

Wikipedia Url: [Web Link]

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