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| The old statue was moved into village administration building (LHS and Village of LaGrange) |
LaGrange village and township employees – using machine and muscle – late last week moved the
granite man from the unheated old fire station to the village’s administration building.
“They rented
a gun safe dolly. They used a lot of muscle, too,” said Jan King, treasurer of
the LaGrange Historical Society. “He is inside where it is temperature controlled.”
The new home
for the statue brings the story full circle for the Picket, which first
reported on the matter in summer 2022 after a tractor trailer driver apparently
fell asleep at the village’s traffic circle. The rig smashed the 1903 memorial into pieces.
The community was determined to make things whole.
Master stone carver Nicholas Fairplay glued “Sherman” back together and used him as a model for a replica. Cleveland Quarries rebuilt the monument base below the soldier.
The statue,
which weighs about 1,500 pounds, is now in a hallway close to the historical
society (he’s too big to fit inside the group’s small museum and learning
center). It is being kept for now in a protective wooden frame.
“We will have
to anchor him down,” said King. “There is a possibility he could be pushed
over.”
That would be
especially tragic for the old fellow, having already suffered the indignity of
losing his head (it broke off) when the truck pulverized the original memorial. (Photos below from LaGrange Township)
The correct
name is “the statue” or “the flag bearer,” she said.
So how did
the stone soldier come to be called “Sherman”?
The monument
base carried the names of LaGrange area residents who served
during the war, the names of a few battles and of Union generals Ulysses S.
Grant, William T. Sherman, Philip Sheridan and George Thomas. Sherman
was an Ohioan.
Sherman’s name on the monument base was directly below the front of the statue, so that name stuck.
I asked King, whose family has lived in the community southwest of Cleveland for generations, to describe the old statue, now that he is on ground level.
The retired seamstress is impressed by the craftsmanship – the flag’s carved stars, stitch marks on his lapel and the deep-set eyes. “There is a lot of detail to it.” (Photos above, LaGrange Historical Society)
The society
and village office are in a former school building on Liberty Street. “Sherman”
is next to a trophy case.
The historical society is open on the third Sunday of each month and on special request. There are old records, photos and a buggy inside, all signaling LaGrange’s rural roots. “It used to be an agricultural city but it is getting more away from that,” said King.
A group of
third-graders once stopped by and King was able to show some of them graduation
photos of their grandparents.
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| New statue at studio in Vermilion and monument installation in LaGrange (Courtesy Cleveland Quarries) |
Villagers used to blow horns and drive around the circle when
they got married; school buses still take victory laps when athletes return
victorious from competitions elsewhere, King added.
Whatever he is called, the replica Union flag bearer is a
fixture in LaGrange and watches over those passing through.





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