
Pioneer Monument - Elmwood, IL
Posted by:
adgorn
N 40° 46.703 W 089° 57.948
16T E 249721 N 4518388
Standing family group including a dog. Male figure has a gun in hand while the female figure holds an infant. Sculpted by the great Illinoisan Lorado Taft and on the National Register of Historic Places.
Waymark Code: WM9WMM
Location: Illinois, United States
Date Posted: 10/06/2010
Views: 1
Inscription: (Base:) TO THE PIONEERS/ WHO BRIDGED THE STREAMS/ SUBDUED THE SOIL AND/ FOUNDED A STATE
From Old Illinois Houses - Birthplace of a Sculptor
(
visit link)
"As a boy in the small L-shaped Elmwood house (now gone as I learned after trying unsuccessfully to find it while there), a plain but tastefully designed home that contained comfortable rooms lined with books, Lorado Taft was tutored by his parents and given a sound foundation for his future career. The family lived here during the Civil War years and then, when Lorado was twelve, moved to Urbana where the elder Taft became a professor of geology in the University of Illinois.
After studying at the University of Illinois, and later at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris, Lorado Taft returned to his native state, established a studio in Chicago, and began the career that brought him national fame. In addition to “The Pioneers,” some of his other principal works are the “Fountain of Time” and the “Fountain of the Great Lakes” in Chicago, the “Black Hawk” statue at Oregon, Illinois, and the Lincoln statue at Urbana.
A proud moment in Lorado Taft’s life was the day in 1928 when he was present at the unveiling of “The Pioneers” in Elmwood and at a reception in his boyhood home afterward. The ten-foot bronze statuary group, conceived as a tribute to his father and mother and other Illinois pioneers, was unveiled by his daughter, Emily, now the wife of Illinois’ Senator-elect Paul H. Douglas of Chicago. The principal speaker was Taft’s brother-in-law, Hamlin Garland, the Midwest author. Lorado Taft died in 1936 (in Chicago) and his ashes were scattered over a plot of ground in Elmwood Cemetery — a spot now marked by one of his most effective sculptural pieces, “Memory.”"
Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.