The Pioneer (Los Angeles)

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The Pioneer
The Pioneer statue.jpg
The Pioneer (2019)
The Pioneer (Los Angeles)
Artist Henry Lion
Location Los Angeles
Coordinates 34°03′41″N118°22′02″W / 34.0613°N 118.3672°W / 34.0613; -118.3672

The Pioneer is a bronze sculpture of a 49er of the California Gold Rush. The statue was created in 1925 by Henry Lion and has long been a landmark of the Carthay Circle, Los Angeles neighborhood in California, United States, except for a brief period in 2008 when it was stolen. It was recovered at a scrap metal yard by the LAPD art-theft division and was reinstalled in January 2009. [1] Created as an homage to the father of the founder of the Carthay Circle district, the statue is sometimes called Dan the Miner after its subject, Daniel O'Connell McCarthy. [2] Originally part of a fountain opposite Carthay Circle Theatre, it was moved to the pocket park at McCarthy Vista and San Vicente Boulevard in 1969. [2] The Pioneer was one of three California-historic-nostalgia monuments in the original layout of Carthay Circle, along with a boulder honoring Jedediah Smith and a sundial made of bricks of Mission San Juan Capistrano. [3]

Lion told Betty Hoag in 1964 for the Archives of American Art oral history project, "[The Pioneer] was a competition, national competition, which I happened to win in 1924. I was just out of Otis; I was 25 years old. It was an anonymous competition and there was a thousand dollar prize in addition to the commission to do it. They gave me the commission and this seven-foot bronze was cast in New York by the Rollin Bronze Works." [4]

See also

References

  1. "The Pioneer Statue". Los Angeles Explorers Guild. October 27, 2021. Retrieved April 13, 2024.
  2. 1 2 "'Dan the Miner'". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved April 13, 2024.
  3. Meares, Hadley (May 3, 2013). "Pioneers, Politics, and Punches: Dan the Miner, Carthay Circle, and Dirty Dealings in the Golden West". PBS SoCal. Retrieved April 13, 2024.
  4. Lion, Henry (May 21, 1964). "Oral history interview with Henry Lion, 1964 May 21 [audio file and transcript]". New Deal and the Arts Oral History Project (Interview). Interviewed by Betty Hoag. Washington, D.C.: Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution . Retrieved April 13, 2024.