William Ewen Shipp - Charlotte, NC
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member bobfrapples8
N 35° 13.792 W 080° 50.801
17S E 513951 N 3898545
Obelisk monument dedicated to William Shipp, who died during the Spanish-American War located in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Waymark Code: WM18TF6
Location: North Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 09/24/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 0

William Shipp was born near Asheville in 1861 and raised in Lincolnton After attending the Carolina Military Institute in Charlotte and later West Point (where he was the first southerner to graduate after the Civil War), Shipp was assigned, at his request to the Tenth Cavalry, a unit comprised of African American soldiers known as the "Buffalo Soldiers." As a second lieutenant, he saw hard service with his unit on the western frontier.

Shipp was promoted to first lieutenant in 1889. Declining assignments that would have kept him out of Cuba, Shipp joined his unit in active service in the Spanish-American War. Shipp met his death in the charge on San Juan Hill during the Battle of Santiago on July 1, 1898. This monument, erected with the encouragement of President Theodore Roosevelt, who served with Shipp in Cuba, was dedicated with great fanfare on May 20, 1902. Roosevelt traveled to Charlotte and visited the Shipp monument on October 19, 1905. President Roosevelt wrote of Shipp, "What a gallant fellow he was!"

This memorial was originally located at the front of the Mint on West Trade Street and was repositioned to the southeast corner of the site when the Post Office expanded in 1934. In 2018, the granite obelisk returned to the front lawn facing Mint Street as part of the Courthouse modernization project.-Historical marker near the monument

The monument to William Shipp is a 30 foot tall obelisk weight 15 tons and made of granite. It has moved twice staying on the same block in Charlotte. It was initially installed next to the Charlotte Mint in 1902 but when the federal building also located here contains the post office and courthouse expanded, this necessitated a move to the southeast corner of the block. In the 1930's the Mint was moved two miles away and this changed the layout of the block. The monument was back to facing Trade Street in 2018.

Inscription:
Amongst a Grove
the Very Straight-
est Plant."
William Ewen Shipp.
First
Lieutenant
Tenth Cavalry
U. S. Army.
Born August 23, 1861.
Killed at San Juan,
Battle of Santiago,
July 1, 1898.
Website pertaining to the memorial: [Web Link]

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Type of memorial: Monument

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