Bust of John F. Kennedy | |
---|---|
Artist | Evangelos Frudakis |
Year | 1965 |
Medium | Bronze, granite |
Subject | John F. Kennedy |
Location | Nashua City Hall, Nashua, New Hampshire, United States |
John F. Kennedy is a 1965 bust of John F. Kennedy, sculpted by Evangelos William Frudakis. It is located on the south side of the city hall plaza in Nashua, New Hampshire, and commemorates Kennedy inaugurating his 1960 presidential campaign in Nashua. [1]
The bust is made of bronze supported on a black granite base. [2] The bust and base are bordered by a black metal fence surrounding flower plantings. The bust has the following inscriptions on its base: [3]
IN MEMORIAM PRESIDENT JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY ON JANUARY 25th, 1960 THIS CITY HALL PLAZA WAS JOHN F. KENNEDY'S FIRST CAMPAIGN STOP IN THE NATION FOR THE PRESIDENCY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
LET THE WORD GO FORTH FROM THIS TIME AND PLACE, TO FRIEND AND FOE ALIKE, THAT THE TORCH HAS BEEN PASSED TO A NEW GENERATION OF AMERICANS--BORN IN THIS CENTURY, TEMPERED BY WAR, DISCIPLINED BY A HARD AND BITTER PEACE, PROUD OF OUR ANCIENT HERITAGE.
JOHN F. KENNEDY JANUARY 20, 1961
PUBLIC CONTRIBUTIONS MISS CECELIA WINN MAYOR MARIO J. VAGGE/ CHR.
ERECTED 1965
The bust, created by the sculptor Evangelos William Frudakis, was financed by the Kennedy Memorial Drive Committee chaired by Cecelia Winn and Nashua Mayor Mario Vagge. It was officially unveiled at Nashua's Veterans Day parade on November 11, 1965. [2] The bust was initially situated in the center of Nashua's City Hall Plaza, facing eastward overlooking Main Street. In 2015, following an expansion of the City Hall Plaza, the bust was moved to the south side and now faces north. [4] In November of 1996, the bust was stolen by Wayne Heinemann, William Moore, and Raymond Descoteaux and recovered by the Nashua police a few days later. [5]
Felix Weihs de Weldon was an Austrian sculptor. His most famous pieces include the United States Marine Corps War Memorial in the Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia, US, and the Malaysian National Monument (1966) in Kuala Lumpur.
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Rose Elizabeth Fitzgerald Kennedy was an American philanthropist, socialite, and matriarch of the Kennedy family. She was deeply embedded in the "lace curtain" Irish-American community in Boston. Her father, John F. Fitzgerald, served in the Massachusetts State Senate (1892–1894), in the U.S. House of Representatives, and as Mayor of Boston. Her husband, Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., chaired the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (1934–1935) and the U.S. Maritime Commission (1937–1938), and served as United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom (1938–1940). Their nine children included United States President John F. Kennedy, U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy of New York, U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts, Special Olympics founder Eunice Kennedy Shriver, and U.S. Ambassador to Ireland Jean Kennedy Smith. In 1951, Rose Kennedy was ennobled by Pope Pius XII, becoming the sixth American woman to be granted the rank of Papal countess.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Federal Building is a United States federal government office building located in the Government Center area of Boston, Massachusetts, adjacent to City Hall Plaza and diagonally across from Boston City Hall. An example of 1960s modern architecture, and designed by Walter Gropius and The Architects Collaborative with Samuel Glaser, it is a complex that consists of two offset 26-floor towers that sit on-axis to each other and a low rise building of four floors that connects to the two towers through an enclosed glass corridor. The two towers stand at a height of 387 feet (118 m). The complex was built in 1963-1966. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2021.
Zenos Frudakis, known as Frudakis, is an American sculptor whose diverse body of work includes monuments, memorials, portrait busts and statues of living and historic individuals, military subjects, sports figures and animal sculpture. Over the past four decades he has sculpted monumental works and over 100 figurative sculptures included within public and private collections throughout the United States and internationally. Frudakis currently lives and works near Philadelphia, and is best known for his sculpture Freedom, which shows a series of figures breaking free from a wall and is installed in downtown Philadelphia. Other notable works are at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, Brookgreen Gardens in South Carolina, the National Academy of Design, and the Lotos Club of New York City, the Imperial War Museum in England, the Utsukushi ga-hara Open Air Museum in Japan, and the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa.
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