Roslindale World War I Memorial

   

Junction of Washington and South Sts
Roslindale (Boston)
MA USA

 

Single figure -- allegorical

Glass

No

No

No

The World War I memorial is nineteen feet high and bears the inscription “Roslindale honors its victorious sons and daughters in World War I. In the glory of their youth we shall remember them.” There is an interesting story behind the World War I monument. A house-to-house canvas for contributions was undertaken to raise the needed funds. The sculptor was to be a noted artist named Henry Albert Atkins, who designed a memorial to cost $30,000.00. A miniature display of the monument was shown in the window of Waters Candy and Ice Cream Parlor, on South Street. Since the goal was never reached, the collected funds remained dormant in the bank until 1955. That year, local resident Fred Davis noticed that the “Old Roslindale Memorial Association” was one of the dormant accounts listed in the paper that would soon revert back to the state. He went to court to reactivate the funds and hired another man to create an affordable memorial in Atkins’ style. Mr. Gordon Carr of the Erikson Monument Co., Quincy Massachusetts designed the monument and the Jones Brothers Co., Barre, Vermont produced it in 1958, 38 years after the first monument was planned.