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Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial

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Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial
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| coords_ref = | area_acre = 25.3824.97|acre}} federal| visitation_num = 155,689| visitation_year = 2005| governing_body = National Park Service| website = Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial| embedded =







factoids
}}Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial commemorates the Battle of Lake Erie that took place near Ohio’s South Bass Island, in which Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry led a fleet to victory in one of the most decisive naval battles to occur in the War of 1812.WEB,www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=3345, Ohio History Central, 2011-04-22, Located on an isthmus on the island,BOOK, Williams, Sherda K., Boyle, Susan, Cultural landscape report: Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial, Put-in-Bay, Ohio,books.google.com/books?id=kyyWpuZalVoC, 1994, National Park Service - Midwest Regional Office, 15, the memorial also celebrates the lasting peace between Britain, Canada, and the United States that followed the war.

Overview

A {{convert|352|ft|adj=on}} monument — the world’s tallest Doric column — was constructed in Put-in-Bay, Ohio by a multi-state commission from 1912 to 1915 “to inculcate the lessons of international peace by arbitration and disarmament.” The memorial was designed after an international competition from which the winning design by Joseph H. Freelander and A.D. Seymour was chosen.Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial was established to honor those who fought in the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812, and to celebrate the long-lasting peace among Britain, Canada and the U.S. The Memorial column, rising over Lake Erie, is situated five miles from the US-Canadian border.Although the monument bears the name of Oliver Hazard Perry, six officers slain during the battle are interred under its rotunda, Perry himself is buried in Newport, Rhode Island. Beneath the stone floor of the monument lie the remains of those three American officers and three British officers. Carved into the walls inside the rotunda are the names of soldiers and sailors who were killed or injured in the Battle of Lake Erie and the text of the Rush-Bagot Treaty.The Doric Column is the only international peace memorial in the United States National Park System and stands 47 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. The upper deck platform is 12 feet higher than the statue of Liberty’s torch.WEB, The Battle of Lake Erie - Perry’s Victory & International Peace Memorial (U.S. National Park Service),www.nps.gov/pevi/learn/historyculture/battle_erie_detail.htm, www.nps.gov, 2015-10-25, To visit the observation deck near the top, visitors must walk up 37 steps, pay the admission cost ($10.00 cash, card, or check for adults 16 and older starting 2019 season, 15 and younger are free) then a National Park Ranger will transport them by elevator to the top. Rangers are stationed at the observation deck to answer questions and speak about the history and surrounding area. Views span Lake Erie, the islands and mainland of Ohio, and nearby islands in Ontario, including Middle Island, the southernmost point of land in Canada, and part of Point Pelee National Park.The column is among the tallest monuments in the United States (the Gateway Arch, San Jacinto Monument, and Washington Monument are taller). Although substantially completed in 1915, funding problems prevented the proper completion of a fully realized memorial complex.Interstate Board of the Perry’s Victory Centennial Commissioners; Watterson, Henry, 1840–1921. The Perry memorial and centennial celebration under the auspices of the national government and the states of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, New York, Rhode Island, Kentucky, Minnesota and Indiana (1912) (Cleveland, Ohio: The Board) In 1919 the federal government assumed control of the monument and provided additional funding. The official dedication was celebrated on July 31, 1931. In 2002, $2.4 million was spent on a new visitor center. The memorial is visited by 200,000 people each year.

Administrative history

Established as Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial National Monument by Franklin D. Roosevelt on June 2, 1936 (Proclamation No. 2182); redesignated a National Memorial and renamed on October 26, 1972. As with all historic areas administered by the National Park Service, the memorial was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on October 15, 1966; the listing’s boundaries were increased in 2015.{{clear}}

2013 US quarter coin

Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial were selected to represent Ohio in the multi-year America the Beautiful Quarters series, honoring a national site from every US state, district, or territory. Its design shows Oliver Hazard Perry on the coin’s reverse, depicting the site’s statue of Perry with the International Peace Memorial in the distance.WEB, United States Mint, United States Mint, Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial,www.usmint.gov/mint_programs/atb/?local=PerrysVictory, United States Mint, 8 June 2013, 18 March 2016,www.usmint.gov/mint_programs/atb/?local=PerrysVictory," title="web.archive.org/web/20160318063628www.usmint.gov/mint_programs/atb/?local=PerrysVictory,">web.archive.org/web/20160318063628www.usmint.gov/mint_programs/atb/?local=PerrysVictory, dead, The design was selected from eleven proposals.CFA Reviews Second Round of Design Candidates for 2013 Quarters, Coin Update, Feb. 27, 2012

Structural concerns

The Memorial had been closed for most of the summer of 2006 after a 500-pound (230 kg) piece of granite broke off the southeast face of the observation deck, falling {{convert|315|ft|m}} and leaving a crater in the plaza in June. No one was injured. Following a structural assessment that deemed it safe for visitors, the memorial reopened on August 26, 2006, with a fence surrounding it.The monument closed on September 30, 2009 for repairs, and reopened on July 12, 2012.The monument was closed once again for the summer of 2017 for repairs and cleaning.“The monument is open as of May 19, 2018 Memorial at Perry’s Victory to Open July 3 After 2 Years of Restoration” (press release, 2012-06-26). Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial website, National Park Service. Retrieved 2012-07-06.NEWS, Tom, Jackson, Perry Memorial to Reopen Ahead of Schedule,www.sanduskyregister.com/put-bay/news/war-1812/perry-memorial-reopen-ahead-schedule, Sandusky Register, 2012-07-02, 2012-07-06,

Interactions with the Boy Scouts of America

Annually, the monument site hosts a large Boy Scout camporee hosted by Troop 360 from Port Clinton, Ohio.WEB, Camporee,www.pctroop360.com/camporee/, pctroop360, Troop 360, 1 September 2019, This camporee attracts a large number of scout troops that camp by the monument grounds. This event, however, is highly susceptible to weather conditions, and has not been held due to flooding concerns.

Gallery

File:Perry’s Monument flags.jpg|Flags of Canada, the U.S., and the U.K. fly next to the memorial at equal height.File:View from the top of Perry’s Memorial Ohio.JPG|alt=View from the top of the Column at Perry’s Memorial|View from the top of the Column at Perry’s MemorialFile:Perry’s Victory and Interational Peace Memorial - Ohio.jpeg|alt=Inside the rotunda at the base of the column|Inside the rotunda at the base of the columnFile:Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial Vistor’s Center.jpg|The memorial column can be seen from the visitor center behind a statue of Commodore Perry.File:Memorial Plaque at Perry’s Monument Ohio.JPG|alt=The Memorial Plaque on the Floor of the Rotunda|The Memorial Plaque on the Floor of the RotundaFile:Steps inside Perry’s Monument Ohio.JPG|alt=Steps inside Perry’s Monument|Steps inside Perry’s Monument

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

External links

{{commons category}} {{National Register of Historic Places}}{{Protected areas of Ohio}}{{Authority control}}

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