32nd Indiana Infantry Monument (Louisville, Kentucky)

Dublin Core

Title

32nd Indiana Infantry Monument (Louisville, Kentucky)

Description

"info found here; for more info see NPS historical register; called the Bloedner Monument; The monument was moved to Cave Hill National Cemetery in 1867 along with the remains of the German soldiers. removed and replaced with new one The monument was removed from the Cave Hill National Cemetery in 2008 for conservation treatment, as it had been severely damaged over the years by various environmental factors. It was relocated to the Frazier International Museum of History in Louisville where it will remain on display. A new monument echoing the design of the 32nd Indiana monument containing both German and English inscriptions was placed in Cave Hill National Cemetery in 2010."

Contributor

Gretasporcich

Type

Site

Identifier

2362

Date Issued

1862-01-01

Extent

m x m x m

Medium

"The Oldest Existing Civil War Monument". The Historical Marker Database, https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=161209. Accessed 02 Apr. 2024.

Spatial Coverage

current,38.24803369174403,-85.72033136736366;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

32nd Indiana Infantry Monument (Louisville, Kentucky)

Europeana Type

TEXT

Site Item Type Metadata

Wiki

https://www.cineg.org/wiki/index.php/32nd_Indiana_Infantry_Monument_(Louisville,_Kentucky)

Monument Type

Stone – carved

Funded by

Private

Inscription

"Here lie men of the 32nd First German Indiana Regiment sacrificed for the free Institutions of the Republic of the United States of North America. They fell on 17 Dec. 1861, in an Encounter at Rowlett Station, in which 1 Regiment of Texas Rangers, 2 Regiments of Infantry, and 6 Rebel Cannons, in all over 3000 Men, were defeated by 500 German Soldiers. [later added] In memory of the First Victims of the 32. Reg. Indiana Vol. Who fell at the Battle of Rowletts Station, Dec. 17, 1861"

State

Kentucky

Affiliation

Union

City

Louisville

Location Type

Cemetery