List of the tallest statues in the United States
This list of the tallest statues in the United States ranks free-standing statues based on their height from base to top.
Statues over 12.2 m (40 ft)
Statue | Height | Image | Sculptor | Completed | Location | Coordinates | Materials | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | ft | ||||||||
Birth of the New World | 110 | 360 | Zurab Tsereteli | 2016 | Arecibo, Puerto Rico | 18°29′10″N 66°37′29″W / 18.48611°N 66.62472°W | bronze | ||
Statue of Liberty Liberty Enlightening the World | 46 | 151 | Frédéric Bartholdi | 1886 | Liberty Island, New York Harbor | 40°41′21″N 74°02′40″W / 40.6892°N 74.0445°W | cast copper on metal armature | Stands upon a 47 m (154 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 93 m (305 ft)[1] The interior framework was designed by Gustave Eiffel. | |
Pegasus and Dragon | 33.5 | 110 | Mark Kara (designer) Stark Engineers[2] Strassacker Art Foundry[3] | 2014 | Gulfstream Park Racetrack and Casino, Hallandale Beach, Florida | 25°58′56″N 80°08′26″W / 25.982155°N 80.140495°W | bronze | Pegasus is 33.4 m (110 ft) in height. The dragon is 15.2 m (50 ft) in height Live webcam of the sculpture. | |
Our Lady of the Rockies | 27 | 88.6 | Laurien Eugene Riehl (designer) | 1985 | Butte, Montana | 46°0′1.7″N 112°26′46.58″W / 46.000472°N 112.4462722°W | concrete base; stainless steel statue | Stands upon a 1.5 m (5 ft) base Total monument height: 28.5 m (93.6 ft)[4] | |
Golden Driller[5] | 23 | 75 | 1953 | Tulsa Expo Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma | 36°08′01″N 95°55′52″W / 36.133638°N 95.931158°W | cast concrete and plaster | |||
Tuong Phat Quan Am | 21.94 | 72 | Mai Chi Kim[6] | 1998 | Chua Viet Nam, Sugar Land, Texas | 29°40′15″N 95°37′03″W / 29.670853°N 95.617491°W | cast concrete | ||
Brachiosaurus Mother and Baby | 21.34 | 70 | Gary Staab | 2009 | Children's Museum of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana | 39°48′39″N 86°9′27″W / 39.81083°N 86.15750°W | fiberglass | ||
United States Marine Corps War Memorial (Iwo Jima Memorial) | 20.7 | 68 | Felix de Weldon | 1954 | Arlington Ridge Park, Arlington, Virginia | 38°53′25.7″N 77°04′10.85″W / 38.890472°N 77.0696806°W | bronze | Stands upon a 3 m (10 ft) base. Total monument height: 23.7 m (78 ft)[7] View with Washington, D.C. in the distance. | |
Giraffe[8] | 20.6 | 67.6 | Bob Cassilly[9] | 1997 | Dallas Zoo, Dallas, Texas | 32°44′38″N 96°48′52″W / 32.74389°N 96.81444°W | bronze and plexiglass | ||
A Tribute to Courage (Sam Houston statue) | 20.5 | 67 | David Adickes | 1994 | Huntsville, Texas | 30°39′40″N 95°30′39″W / 30.66111°N 95.51083°W | cast concrete | Stands upon a 3 m (10 ft) pedestal[10] | |
Christ of the Ozarks[11] | 20 | 65.5 | Emmet Sullivan | 1966 | Magnetic Mountain, Eureka Springs, Arkansas | 36°24′24.87″N 93°43′23.41″W / 36.4069083°N 93.7231694°W | cast concrete | ||
Lucy the Elephant | 19.7 | 65 | James V. Lafferty, designer | 1881 | Margate City, New Jersey | 39°19′14.33″N 74°30′42.85″W / 39.3206472°N 74.5119028°W | wood, tin sheeting | Similar novelty buildings built at Coney Island, New York and Cape May, New Jersey do not survive. NRHP listed. | |
Brontosaurus "Dinny the Dinosaur" | 19.7 | 65 | Claude K. Bell | 1978 | Dinosaur Delights, Cabazon, California | 33°55′12.5″N 116°46′22.25″W / 33.920139°N 116.7728472°W | concrete over a steel frame | The novelty building is 45.7 m (150 ft) in length. The roadside attraction also features a 13.7 m (45 ft) Tyrannosaurus Rex statue.[12] | |
Indian of Skowhegan | 18.9 | 62 | 75px | Bernard Langlais | 1969 | Skowhegan, Maine | 44°46′04″N 69°43′11″W / 44.767792°N 69.719803°W | wood, concrete base | Created for the 150th anniversary of Maine statehood Stands upon a 6.1 m (20 ft) base Total monument height: 25 m (82 ft)[13] |
Vulcan | 17.1 | 56 | Giuseppe Moretti | 1904 | Red Mountain, Birmingham, Alabama | 33°29′30.18″N 86°47′43.86″W / 33.4917167°N 86.7955167°W | cast iron | Created for the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. Stands upon a 38.4 m (126 ft) tower. Total monument height: 55.5 m (182 ft)[14] | |
Hiawatha | 15.8 | 52 | Gordon Displays | 1964 | Hiawatha Park, Ironwood, Michigan | 46°26′59″N 90°09′44″W / 46.449709°N 90.162152°W | fiberglass | Stands upon a 0.8 m (2.5 ft) base Total monument height: 16.6 m (54.5 ft)[15] | |
Lux Mundi Light of the World | 15.8 | 52 | Tom Tsuchiya | 2012 | Solid Rock Church, Monroe, Ohio | 39°27′13.78″N 84°19′35.37″W / 39.4538278°N 84.3264917°W | polymer, composite, steel | ||
Jolly Green Giant | 15.2 | 50 | Creative Displays F.A.S.T. Corp. | 1979 | Blue Earth, Minnesota | 43°39′02″N 94°5′46″W / 43.65056°N 94.09611°W | fiberglass | Stands upon a 1.7 m (5.5 ft) base Total monument height: 16.9 m (55.5 ft)[16] | |
Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox | 15 | 49.2 | Ward Berg | Bunyan 1961 Babe 1950 | Trees of Mystery, Klamath, California | 41°35′4.1″N 124°5′8.83″W / 41.584472°N 124.0857861°W | wood, chicken wire, stucco | Replaced a 1946 Bunyan statue by Ray & William Thompson.[17] Based on a model by Ann Cooper.[18] | |
Black Hawk Statue The Eternal Indian | 14.6 | 48 | Lorado Taft | 1911 | Lowden State Park, near Oregon, Illinois | 42°2′03″N 89°19′59″W / 42.03417°N 89.33306°W | concrete | ||
Hammering Man | 14.6 | 48 | Lippincott, Inc. | 1991 | Seattle Art Museum, Washington, Seattle | (47°36′25.31″N 122°20′17.20″W / 47.6070306°N 122.3381111°W) | steel | [19] | |
Atlas | 13.7 | 45 | Lee Lawrie | 1937 | Rockefeller Center, Manhattan, New York City | 40°45′32.12″N 73°58′37.84″W / 40.7589222°N 73.9771778°W | bronze, granite base | Stands upon a 2.7 m (9 ft) base. Total monument height: 16.4 m (54 ft) | |
The Keeper of the Plains | 13.4 | 44 | Blackbear Bosin | 1974 | Mid-America All-Indian Center, Wichita, Kansas | 37°41′29″N 97°20′59″W / 37.69139°N 97.34972°W | Cor-Ten steel | Stands upon a 9.1 m (30 ft) rock promontory | |
Rocket Thrower | 12.95 | 42.5 | Donald De Lue | 1964 | Flushing Meadows–Corona Park, Queens, New York City | 40°44′51″N 73°50′32″W / 40.7474°N 73.8421°W | bronze | Created for the 1964 New York World's Fair[20] | |
Athena Parthenos Athena of the Parthenon | 12.8 | 42 | Alan LeQuire | 1990 | Parthenon, Nashville, Tennessee | 36°08′59″N 86°48′49″W / 36.14972°N 86.81361°W | composite of gypsum cement and fiberglass | Tallest indoor statue in United States. | |
Statues between 6.1 and 12.2 m (20 and 40 ft)
Statue | Height | Image | Sculptor | Completed | Location | Coordinates | Materials | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | ft | ||||||||
Big Freeport Indian Chief Passamaquoddy | 12.2 | 40 | Rodman Shutt | 1969 | Conundrum Wine Bistro, 313 Yarmouth Road, Freeport, Maine | 43°49′04″N 70°08′41″W / 43.817851°N 70.144675°W | fiberglass | Stands upon a 2.7 m (9 ft) base Total monument height: 14.9 m (49 ft)[21] Nickname: "BFI" | |
Victory "Miss Indiana" | 11.58 | 38 | George Brewster | 1893 | Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, Indianapolis, Indiana | 39°46′6″N 86°9′29″W / 39.76833°N 86.15806°W | bronze | Victory stands atop a 75 m (246 ft) tower. Total monument height: 86.56 m (284 ft)[22] Restored in 2011[23] | |
Vision of Peace Indian God of Peace | 11.58 | 38 | Carl Milles | 1936 | City Hall, St. Paul, Minnesota | 44°56′39″N 93°5′38″W / 44.94417°N 93.09389°W | Mexican onyx | ||
William Penn | 11.3 | 37 | Alexander Milne Calder | 1894 | City Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 39°57′10″N 75°09′49″W / 39.95281°N 75.16352°W | bronze | Stands atop a 155.75 m (511 ft) tower designed by John McArthur, Jr.. | |
Apatosaurus "Wall Drug Dinosaur" | 11.3 | 37 | Emmet Sullivan | 1968 | Wall Drug Store, Wall, South Dakota | 43°59′36″N 102°14′30″W / 43.993231°N 102.241795°W | concrete over an iron frame | The dinosaur statue is 24.4 m (80 ft) in length. | |
Portlandia | 11.25 | 36.9 | Raymond Kaskey | 1985 | The Portland Building, Portland, Oregon | 45°30′56.7″N 122°40′44.5″W / 45.515750°N 122.679028°W | bronze | Stands atop the entrance pavilion to The Portland Building. | |
National Monument to the Forefathers Central figure: Faith | 11 | 36 | Faith: William Rimmer & [John D.?] Perry | 1907 | Pilgrim Memorial State Park, Plymouth, Massachusetts | 41°57′36″N 70°40′34″W / 41.96000°N 70.67611°W | solid granite | Faith stands upon a 13.7 m (45 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 24.7 m (81 ft)[24] Other figures: Alexander Doyle, Carl Conrads & James H. Mahoney. Architect: Joseph Edward Billings | |
Iron Man | 11 | 36 | Jack E. Anderson | 1987 | Minnesota Discovery Center, Chisholm, Minnesota | 47°17′20″N 92°32′15″W / 47.28876°N 92.53762°W | iron ore | Stands upon a 14 m (45 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 25 m (81 ft)[25] | |
Paul Bunyan | 10.1 | 33 | Dean Krotzer | 1985 | Paul Bunyan Historical Museum, Akeley, Minnesota | 47°00′12″N 94°43′50″W / 47.003348°N 94.730593°W | fiberglass | Visitors can sit in Bunyan's right hand.[26] | |
David (inspired by Michelangelo) | 10 | 32.8 | Serkan Özkaya | 2011 | 21c Museum Hotel, 700 W. Main Street, Louisville, Kentucky | fiberglass | Stands upon a 5 m (16.4 ft) pedestal[27] Total monument height: 15 m (49.2 ft) | ||
Ceres | 9.4 | 31 | John Storrs | 1930 | Chicago Board of Trade Building, Chicago, Illinois | 41°52′41.25″N 87°37′56.1″W / 41.8781250°N 87.632250°W | aluminum | Stands atop a 184 m (605 ft) office building. | |
Paul Bunyan | 9.4 | 31 | J. Norman Martin | 1959 | Bass Park, Bangor, Maine | 44°47′19″N 68°46′42″W / 44.788657°N 68.778337°W | fiberglass over a steel frame | Stands upon a 2.1 m (6.7 ft) base Total monument height: 11.5 m (37.7 ft)[28] | |
Paul Bunyan | 9.4 | 31 | Victor R. Nelson | 1959 | Portland, Oregon | 45°35′02″N 122°41′12″W / 45.583829°N 122.686616°W | concrete over a steel frame | Created for the 1959 Oregon Centennial Exposition NRHP listed.[29] | |
Bellerophon Taming Pegasus | 9.1 | 30 | Jacques Lipchitz | 1977 | Jerome Greene Hall, Columbia University, New York City | 40°48′25.34″N 73°57′38.09″W / 40.8070389°N 73.9605806°W | bronze | ||
Martin Luther King, Jr. | 8.53 | 28 | Lei Yixin | 2011 | Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial, West Potomac Park, Washington, D.C. | 38°53′10″N 77°2′39″W / 38.88611°N 77.04417°W | granite | Carved into a 9.1 m (30 ft) block of granite.[30] | |
The Equestrian Don Juan de Oñate | 8.53 | 28 | John Sherrill Houser & Ethan Taliesin Houser | 2007 | El Paso International Airport, El Paso, Texas | 31°47′46.021″N 106°23′44.84″W / 31.79611694°N 106.3957889°W | bronze | The Equestrian stands upon a 2.4 m (8 ft) base. Total monument height: 11 m (36 ft)[31] | |
Hermann Heights Monument | 8.2 | 27 | Alfonz Pelzer | 1897 | New Ulm, Minnesota | Sheet copper over iron | Stands on a 21 m (70 ft) iron column encircled by a spiral staircase to the dome, which is supported by 10 iron columns and a Kasota stone base. | ||
Forever Marilyn (Marilyn Monroe in The Seven Year Itch) | 7.9 | 26 | Seward Johnson | 2011 | The Sculpture Foundation, Hamilton, New Jersey | stainless steel, aluminum | Exhibited in Chicago, Illinois (2011–12) and Palm Springs, California (2012–14) | ||
Civic Fame | 7.6 | 25 | Adolph Alexander Weinman | 1914 | Manhattan Municipal Building, New York City | 40°42′46.67″N 74°0′14″W / 40.7129639°N 74.00389°W | gilded copper | Stands atop a 180 m (580 ft) office building. There is disagreement as to whether the model for the statue was Audrey Munson or Julia “Dudie” Baird. | |
Miss Pocahontas[32] | 7.6 | 25 | W. C. Ballard | 1956 | Pocahontas, Iowa | 42°43′58″N 94°39′31″W / 42.732739°N 94.658478°W | steel, wood & fiberglass | ||
Johnny Kaw | 7.6 | 25 | William Stewart | 1966 | Manhattan, Kansas | 39°18′02″N 96°57′36″W / 39.30056°N 96.96000°W | concrete over a steel frame | Stands upon a 0.25 m (0.75 ft) base Total monument height: 7.85 m (25.75 ft)[33] | |
Unconditional Surrender | 7.6 | 25 | Seward Johnson | 2007 | San Diego, California | a foam core with a urethane outer layer | |||
Orpheus Francis Scott Key Monument | 7.3 | 24 | Charles Henry Niehaus | 1922 | Fort McHenry Baltimore, Maryland | 39°15′50.91″N 76°34′54.75″W / 39.2641417°N 76.5818750°W | bronze | Commissioned in 1914 to commemorate the centennial of Key's writing of The Star-Spangled Banner. Stands upon a 4.6 m (15 ft) pedestal Total monument height: 11.9 m (39 ft)[34] | |
Fountain of Time | 7.3 | 24 | Lorado Taft | 1922 | Washington Park, Chicago, Illinois | 41°47′12.3″N 87°36′27.9″W / 41.786750°N 87.607750°W | hollow-cast concrete over a steel frame | Total monument length: 38.7 m (127 ft) Father Time watching the parade of humanity | |
Ad Astra (To the Stars) | 6.76 | 22.2 | Richard Bergen | 2002 | Kansas State Capitol, Tokepa, Kansas | 39°02′53″N 95°40′41″W / 39.04806°N 95.67806°W | bronze | A Kansa warrior aiming an arrow at the North Star[35] Stands atop the Capitol dome | |
The American Volunteer "Old Simon" | 6.55 | 21.5 | Carl Conrads George Keller (architect) | 1876 installed 1880 | Antietam National Cemetery, Sharpsburg, Maryland | 39°27′33″N 77°44′28″W / 39.45917°N 77.74111°W | solid granite | Stands upon a 7 m (23 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 13.55 m (44.5 ft) Exhibited at the 1876 Centennial Exposition. Tallest statue in the United States prior to 1886 completion of the Statue of Liberty.[36] | |
Goddess of Victory and Peace | 6.4 | 21 | Samuel Murray | 1910 | Pennsylvania State Memorial Gettysburg Battlefield, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania | 39°48′27″N 77°14′07″W / 39.807588°N 77.235153°W | bronze | Stands atop a 27.1 m (89 ft) pavilion. Total monument height: 33.5 m (110 ft) The goddess figure was cast from melted-down cannons.[37] | |
Apotheosis of St. Louis | 6.1 | 20 | Charles Henry Niehaus | 1903-06 | St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri | 38°38′23″N 90°17′39″W / 38.63980°N 90.29409°W | bronze | Niehaus modeled the statue in plaster for the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. It was later cast in bronze by W. R. Hodges. Stands upon a 5.9 m (19.5 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 12 m (39.5 ft)[38] | |
Columbia Triumphant USS Maine Quadriga | 6.1 | 20 | Attilio Piccirilli | 1913 | USS Maine National Monument, Columbus Circle, Central Park, New York City | 40°46′06″N 73°58′52″W / 40.768242°N 73.981012°W | gilded bronze | Stands upon a 13.1 m (43 ft) pylon Total monument height: 19.2 m (63 ft)[39] | |
Statues under 6.1 m (20 ft)
Statue | Height | Image | Sculptor | Completed | Location | Coordinates | Materials | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | ft | ||||||||
‘’Statue of Freedom’’ | 5.9 | 19.5 | Thomas Crawford | 1862 | United States Capitol, Washington, D.C. | 38°53′24″N 77°0′32.4″W / 38.89000°N 77.009000°W | bronze | Stands atop the lantern of the U.S. Capitol's dome. | |
Thomas Jefferson | 5.8 | 19 | Rudulph Evans | 1943 | Jefferson Memorial, Washington, D.C. | 38°52′53″N 77°2′13″W / 38.88139°N 77.03694°W | bronze | Stands upon a 1.8 m (6 ft) pedestal Total monument height: 7.6 m (25 ft)[40] | |
Colorado Thatcher Memorial Fountain | 5.5 | 18 | Lorado Taft | 1918 | City Park, Denver, Colorado | 39°44′41″N 104°57′25″W / 39.74480°N 104.95685°W | bronze | Stands upon a 2.75 m (9 ft) pedestal. | |
Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox | 5.5 | 18 | Cyril M. Dickenson (Bunyan) Jim Payton (Babe) | Bunyan 1937 Babe 1939 | Bemidji, Minnesota | concrete and plaster | Bunyan stands upon a 0.4 m (1.5 ft) base. Total monument height: 5.9 m (19.5 ft)[41] | ||
Illustrious Brother George Washington | 5.26 | 17.25 | Bryant Baker | 1950 | George Washington Masonic National Memorial, Alexandria, Virginia | 38°48′27″N 77°03′58″W / 38.80748°N 77.06598°W | bronze | Stands upon a 1.57 m (5.16 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 6.83 m (22.41 ft)[42] Dedicated by President Harry S. Truman, February 22, 1950 | |
Equestrian Statue of General Ulysses S. Grant | 5.23 | 17.2 | Henry Shrady | 1924 | Ulysses S. Grant Memorial, west of United States Capitol, Washington, D.C. | 38°53′23.1″N 77°0′46.4″W / 38.889750°N 77.012889°W | bronze | Stands upon a 6.86 (22.5 ft) pedestal Total monument height: 12.1 m (39.7 ft)[43] | |
Theodore Roosevelt | 5.2 | 17 | Paul Manship | 1967 | Theodore Roosevelt Island National Memorial, Potomac River, Washington, D.C. | 38°53′50.74″N 77°3′50.19″W / 38.8974278°N 77.0639417°W | bronze | Stands upon a 1.7 m (5.6 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 9.1 m (30 ft)[44] | |
Pioneer Woman | 5.2 | 17 | Bryant Baker | 1930 | Ponca City, Oklahoma | bronze on granite bass | The sculptor was chosen by the museum-going public following a touring exhibition of the 12 proposed models. | ||
Air Force Honor Guard | 5.2 | 17 | Zenos Frudakis | 2006 | United States Air Force Memorial, Arlington, Virginia | 38°52′07″N 77°03′59″W / 38.868649°N 77.066259°W | bronze | The three stainless steel spires represent the contrails of the Air Force Thunderbirds. The tallest of these is 82.3 m (270 ft).[45] | |
Superman | 4.87[46] | 16[46] | Unknown | 1993[47] | Metropolis, Illinois | 37°08′46″N 88°44′08″W / 37.1460999°N 88.7355066°W | bronze | ||
Equestrian Statue of General William Tecumseh Sherman Sherman Memorial | 4.72 | 15.5 | Augustus Saint Gaudens | 1903 | Grand Army Plaza, Central Park, New York City | 40°45′52″N 73°58′24″W / 40.7645°N 73.9732°W | gilded bronze | Stands upon a 2.7 m (8.8 ft) base Total monument height: 7.42 (24.3 ft) | |
Diana of the Tower | 4.45 | 14.6 | Augustus Saint Gaudens | 1893 | Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 39°57′58″N 75°10′52″W / 39.966°N 75.181°W | gilded copper | Created as a replacement weather vane for the 92.66 m (304 ft) tower of Madison Square Garden, New York City. Removed when the building was demolished, 1925.[48] | |
George Washington | 4.3 | 14 | Lorado Taft | 1909 | University of Washington, Seattle, Washington | 47°39′22″N 122°18′40″W / 47.6560736°N 122.3111274°W | bronze | Created for the 1909 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition Stands upon a 8.5 (28 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 12.8 m (42 ft)[49] | |
Gloria Victis | 4.3 | 14 | Frederick Ruckstull | 1909 | Salisbury, North Carolina | 35°40′06″N 80°28′16″W / 35.66833°N 80.47111°W | bronze | Stands upon a 2.7 m (9 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 7 m (23 ft)[50] | |
Benjamin Franklin | 3.8 | 12.5 | James Earle Fraser | 1938 | Benjamin Franklin National Memorial, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 39°57′29″N 75°10′25″W / 39.95806°N 75.17361°W | marble | Stands upon a 2.5 m (8.4 ft) pedestal. Total monument height: 7.3 m (20.9 ft)[51] The Institute's rotunda is a memorial to Franklin. | |
Other organizational lists
- List of statues by height
- List of statues
- List of Roman domes
- New Seven Wonders of the World
- List of archaeological sites sorted by country
- List Of Colossal Sculpture In Situ
- List of megalithic sites
- List of archaeoastronomical sites sorted by country
- List of Egyptian pyramids
- List of Mesoamerican pyramids
References
- ↑ National Park Service, US Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/stli/prod02.htm
- ↑ "Pegasus and Dragon – The biggest horse statue of the world." Press release, STARK Engineers, August 2014. (PDF)
- ↑ Pegasus, from Strassacker Kunstgiesserei.
- ↑ Our Lady of the Rockies (sculpture), from SIRIS.
- ↑ Best of Tulsa. "Tulsa Landmarks".
- ↑ "Quan Am, Texas-style"
- ↑ U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial, from SIRIS.
- ↑ The Roadside Gallery. "Huge Giraffe Statue Dallas Zoo — Dallas, TX".
- ↑ Tomaso, Bruce (2011-10-09). "Creator of Dallas Zoo's giraffe sculpture dies in bulldozer accident". Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2011-10-23.
- ↑ Huntville Statue & Visitors Center, www.samhoustonstatue.org
- ↑ The Great Passion Play. "Christ at the Ozarks".
- ↑ Brontosaurus and Tyrannosaurus Rex, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Indian of Skowhegan, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Vulcan Park Foundation. "The History of Vulcan Park".
- ↑ Hiawatha (sculpture), from SIRIS.
- ↑ Jolly Green Giant (sculpture), from SIRIS.
- ↑ Babe the Blue Ox, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Paul Bunyan (sculpture), from SIRIS.
- ↑ http://artbeat.seattle.gov/tag/hammering-man/
- ↑ Rocket Thrower, from NYC Parks.
- ↑ The Big Indian, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Indianapolis Star. "After $1.5M makeover, Miss Indiana's ready for her close-up on the Circle".
- ↑ "National Monument to the Forefathers (sculpture)". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ↑ Roadside attractions. "Minnesota landmarks".
- ↑ Paul Bunyan, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Hürriyet Daily News (Ankara, Turkey), September 19, 2011
- ↑ Paul Bunyan (sculpture), from SIRIS.
- ↑ Oregon State Historic Preservation Office staff, Maiya Martin, and Bette Davis Nelson (March 19, 2008). National Register of Historic Places Registration: Paul Bunyan Statue (pdf). National Park Service. (44 pages, including maps and photos)
- ↑ Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial, from SIRIS.
- ↑ "The World's Largest Equestrian Bronze". City of El Paso, TX. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
- ↑ Miss Pocahontas, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Johnny Kaw (sculpture), from SIRIS.
- ↑ Francis Scott Key Monument, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Ad Astra, from SIRIS.
- ↑ George Hess, History of the Antietam National Cemetery, Including A Descriptive List of All The Loyal Soldiers Buried Therein... (Harrisburg, PA: Daily Independent Print, 1890), p. 9.
- ↑ Loski, Diana. "The Pennsylvania Memorial: A Centennial". GettysburgExperience.com. Retrieved 2011-02-03.
- ↑ Apotheosis of St. Louis, from SIRIS.
- ↑ USS Maine Monument, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Jefferson Memorial, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Illustrious Brother George Washington, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Grant Memorial, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Theodore Roosevelt Memorial, from SIRIS.
- ↑ United States Air Force Memorial, from SIRIS.
- 1 2 http://www.wbez.org/news/how-superman-saved-small-illinois-town-107699
- ↑ http://adventure.howstuffworks.com/roadside-statues7.htm
- ↑ Diana, from Philadelphia Museum of Art.
- ↑ George Washington, from SIRIS.
- ↑ Gloria Victis, from the Salisbury Post.
- ↑ Benjamin Franklin, from SIRIS.
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