Browse Items (3296 total)

A granite soldier stands at parade rest atop a plinth outside Marion Courthouse. It was produced by Charles M. Walsh at a cost of $1,100, and unveiled on July 4, 1903, to a crowd of 10,000, with dedicatory addresses from Robert E. Lee, Jr. and John…

A bronze soldier, with musket drawn and pointed forward, stands atop a granite plinth. On the base, there are two bronze relief panels, each depicting a lone woman, one holding the shield of Virginia, the other a Confederate flag. The statue,…

Cast in white bronze, a lone soldier stands in parade rest atop a plinth which is decorated with a bas-relief of Robert E. Lee. The monument, now located outside Carroll County Courthouse, was erected in 1907. It was originally situated in the middle…

The Botetourt Artillery Obelisk stands a proud 27ft tall on the busy main street of Buchanan, Virginia. It commemorates not only the local Buchanan company of soldiers that was organized in 1859, but all soldiers who fought during the war, as well as…

Little is known about the marble standing soldier positioned at solider arms that looms in front of the courthouse in Lebanon, Virginia. Erected on July 8th, 1914, the monument was a result of townspeople from Lebanon and neighbouring cities who had…

Erected by the Sons of Confederate Veterans on October 16th, 1988, the Gate City Courthouse Plaque commemorates the Confederate soldiers of Scott County, Virginia. The monument consists of a bronze plaque that reads the dedication mounted upon a…

Purposefully standing near the state line between Virginia and Tennessee, the Confederate Soldier Monument commemorates both the Confederate men and women from each state. Funded by James M Barker, a former Confederate colonel and influential…

The East Hill Cemetery Tablet sits in the hilltop cemetery straddling the state line between Bristol, Tennessee and Bristol, Virginia. Commemorating the 300 Confederate dead estimated to be buried around the site, the Tablet overlooks the military…

Standing in front of the county courthouse in Tazewell, VA, the Common Soldier monument directly commemorates "the Confederate Soldier of Tazewell". Facing North in an aggressive and vigil pose, the Soldier is made of white bronze, a material…

The place where the Jefferson Cemetery Shaft stands today began as a temporary repository for the bodies of dead Confederate soldiers during the war. The site was formally given commemoration in 1892 by the Brown-Harman Camp of Confederate Veterans.…
Output Formats

atom, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2