Seven years after it was vandalized, the 11th Massachusetts Infantry monument at Gettysburg National Military Park was whole again Thursday.
Once the sword-swinging granite
arm was placed on top of the pedestal, the staff attached the sword and
hand guard, the park said in a press release.
To replicate the vandalized pieces, National
Park Service specialist Brian Griffin studied historic photos – including those
by Willliam H. Tipton -- and fragments of the arm, fingers and sword.
“Brian … got a perspective of distances, lengths and sizes,” said Lucas Flickinger, supervisor of the monument preservation branch at the battlefield. “It was pretty painstaking. There were two or three weeks of scaling from the photos.”
Griffin
spent about three months on the clay modeling and made a plaster cast that was
sent to Granite Industries of Vermont in 2012, which made the final product.
The
monument near Emmitsburg Road is a bit unusual.
Rather than depicting a full figure, the
monument depicts an upraised arm, poised to bring a sword down.
“I think it is a very powerful symbol of
resolve,” Flickinger told the Civil War Picket.
Additionally,
the 4th New York Artillery (Smith’s Battery), and the 114th Pennsylvania
Infantry were vandalized on the same day in February 2006. The park
previously repaired them.
Despite a $30,000 reward for information, no arrests or convictions have been made.
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