Massachusetts Peace Statue
The statue was created by sculptor Joseph Pollia (1894-1954) and dedicated on May 30,1934. According to Congressman John W. Olver of Massachusetts, this sculpture received national attention when it was dedicated in 1934 and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt sent a letter commemorating the event.
The sculpture depicts a doughboy just returned from the war-torn fields of France. He is seated wearily on a stump, and beside him stands a typical American schoolboy of perhaps 10 years, who is partially embraced by the soldier’s left arm. He appears to be listening intently to the soldier’s words with fist clenched.
The statue appears in the fifth episode of Hulu's Stephen King inspired series, Castle Rock.
Symbolism
This statue addresses the need for world peace through its inscription "It Shall Not Be Again" and is said to be the only peace statue of its kind. The sculpture is placed on top of a two-tiered base decorated with a plaque depicting a profiled female figure with the words "It shall not be again". Her left hand is placed over the top of a shield and her right hand is held up to her face; there is a helmet and gun at her feet. Eleven stars on the shield denote the eleven young men from Orange who gave their lives in World War I. The inscription is from a poem entitled "Apparitions" by Thomas Curtis Clark (1877-1953), a prolific Christian hymn writer and poet.
Who goes there, in the night,
Across the storm-swept plain?
We are the ghosts of a valiant war —
A million murdered men!
Who goes there, at the dawn,
Across the sun-swept plain?
We are the hosts of those who swear:
It shall not be again!
42°35′23″N 72°18′33″W / 42.589741°N 72.309231°W
References
- ^ "Massachusetts Facts". Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
- ^ "General Laws".
- ^ "Art Inventories Catalog". Smithsonian American Art Museum.
- ^ "Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 68, Friday, May 14, 2004". U.S. Government.
- ^ Young, Allen.North of Quabbin, Revisited.Halleys, 2002
- ^ McLellan, David (July 30, 2018). "Peace memorial has a history of its own". Athol Daily News. Retrieved August 13, 2018.
- ^ "Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 68, Friday, May 14, 2004". U.S. Government.
- ^ "Thomas Curtis Clark". Hymn Time.
- ^ "Apparitions". Poetry Nook.