Robbins Memorial Flagstaff
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Robbins_Memorial_Flagstaff an entity of type: Thing
The Robbins Memorial Flagstaff (1913) is a structure supporting and topping a flagpole in Arlington, Massachusetts created by Cyrus Dallin. The supporting sculpture includes a variety of sculptural elements including bronze figures, stone eagles, and snapping turtles with a finial representing American Agriculture. The sculpture resides to the west of Town Hall at 730 Massachusetts Avenue. The sculpture can be found about 300 yards west of the Cyrus Dallin Art Museum.
* American Agriculture Figure Original can be seen close up in the nearby Cyrus Dallin Art Museum
* Pilgrim Divine
* Squaw Sachem
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Robbins Memorial Flagstaff
rdf:langString
Robbins Memorial Flagstaff
xsd:integer
68181403
xsd:integer
1095969902
rdf:langString
Arlington, Massachusetts, U.S.
xsd:integer
19
<foot>
5.0
rdf:langString
in
rdf:langString
no
rdf:langString
Bronze
rdf:langString
cm
rdf:langString
Town of Arlington, Massachusetts
rdf:langString
Includes several sculptural figures including The Minuteman of 1776, a gentleman reading, Squaw Sachem, an Indigenous American woman and a woman teaching a child to read
rdf:langString
Robbins Memorial Flagstaff
xsd:integer
1913
rdf:langString
The Robbins Memorial Flagstaff (1913) is a structure supporting and topping a flagpole in Arlington, Massachusetts created by Cyrus Dallin. The supporting sculpture includes a variety of sculptural elements including bronze figures, stone eagles, and snapping turtles with a finial representing American Agriculture. The sculpture resides to the west of Town Hall at 730 Massachusetts Avenue. The sculpture was commissioned by architect Richard Clipston Sturgis who prepared the site plan for the library/town hall area and designed the adjacent Town Hall. Cyrus Dallin created the sculpture with input by Sturgis. The eagles on the base were executed by the prominent stone carver, John Evans of Boston. On June 25, 1913, this sculpture and the nearby Menotomy Hunter were dedicated and Dallin's speech included a passionate plea for renaming the town of Arlington as Menotomy after the historic significance of its largely vanished inhabitants. The four figures around the base include a colonial woman teaching a child to read, an Indigenous American woman with a papoose on her back, the Minuteman of 1776, and a man reading a bible. At the time of its creation it was described as "Perhaps as great a test of a sculptor's powers as anything that could be conceived." The sculpture can be found about 300 yards west of the Cyrus Dallin Art Museum.
* American Agriculture Figure Original can be seen close up in the nearby Cyrus Dallin Art Museum
* Pilgrim Divine
* Squaw Sachem
* Pilgrim Mother and Child
* Patriot
* Eagle
* Ornament
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
5592