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Central Prairie Honor Flights |
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Some facts about the WWII Memorial:
Authorization
President Clinton signed Public Law 103-32
on May 25, 1993, authorizing the American
Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC) to
establish a World War II Memorial in
Washington, D.C., or its environs. It is the
first national memorial dedicated to all who
served during World War II and acknowledging
the commitment and achievement of the entire
nation.
Purpose
The memorial honors the 16 million who
served in the armed forces of the U.S.
during World War II, the more than 400,000
who died, and the millions who supported the
war effort from home. Symbolic of the
defining event of the 20th Century, the
memorial is a monument to the spirit,
sacrifice, and commitment of the American
people to the common defense of the nation
and to the broader causes of peace and
freedom from tyranny throughout the world.
It will inspire future generations of
Americans, deepening their appreciation of
what the World War II generation
accomplished in securing freedom and
democracy. Above all, the memorial stands as
an important symbol of American national
unity, a timeless reminder of the moral
strength and awesome power that can flow
when a free people are at once united and
bonded together in a common and just cause.
Site
The first step in establishing the memorial
was the selection of an appropriate site.
Congress provided legislative authority for
siting the memorial in the prime area of the
national capital, known as Area I, which
includes the National Mall. The National
Park Service, the Commission of Fine Arts,
and the National Capital Planning Commission
approved selection of the Rainbow Pool site
at the east end of the Reflecting Pool
between the Lincoln Memorial and the
Washington Monument. President Clinton
dedicated the memorial site during a formal
ceremony on Veterans Day 1995.
Design
ABMC engaged the General Services
Administration’s (GSA) Public Buildings
Service to act as its agent to manage the
memorial project. The design submitted by
Friedrich St.Florian, an architect based in
Providence, R.I., was selected as one of six
semi-finalists in an open, national
competition. Leo A Daly, an international
architecture firm, assembled the winning
team with St.Florian as the design
architect. The team also included George E.
Hartman of Hartman-Cox Architects, landscape
architect Oehme van Sweden & Associates,
sculptor Ray Kaskey, and stone carver and
letterer Nick Benson. St.Florian’s memorial
design concept was approved by the
Commission of Fine Arts and the National
Capital Planning Commission in the summer of
1998. The commissions approved the
preliminary design in 1999, the final
architectural design and several ancillary
elements in 2000, granite selections in
2001, and sculpture and inscriptions in 2002
and 2003.
Fund-raising Campaign
The memorial was funded primarily by private
contributions. The fund-raising campaign was
led by National Chairman Senator Bob Dole
and National Co-Chairman Frederick W. Smith.
Senator Dole, a World War II veteran
seriously wounded on the battlefield and
twice decorated with the Bronze Star and
Purple Heart, was the Republican nominee for
president in 1996 and the longest-serving
Republican Leader in the U.S. Senate.
Frederick W. Smith is chairman, president
and chief executive officer of FedEx
Corporation, a global transportation and
logistics holding company. He is a graduate
of Yale and a former U.S. Marine Corps
officer, and serves on the boards of various
transport, industry and civic organizations.
The memorial received more than $197 million
in cash and pledges. This total includes $16
million provided by the federal government.
Timeline
Construction began in September 2001. The
memorial opened to the public on April 29,
2004, and was dedicated on Saturday, May 29,
2004. The memorial became part of the
National Park System on Nov. 1, 2004, when
it was transferred from the American Battle
Monuments Commission to the National Park
Service, which now operates and maintains
the memorial.
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Central Prairie Resource
Conservation & Development |
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Central Prairie RC & D, The Natural Resource Conservation
Service, and the Central Prairie Honor Flight Committee
offers all programs, services, and projects to the public
without regard to race, color, sex, national origin, age,
disability, or political beliefs. |
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