Thursday, April 30, 2015

USS Santa Fe CL-60 Memorial, Santa Fe New Mexico


A memorial to the Cleavland Class light cruiser the USS Santa Fe, which served for the U.S. Navy during World War Two.

End of the Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe New Mexico



End of the Santa Fe Trail marker, Santa Fe Plaza.

Painted Bricks: Evangelo's, Santa Fe New Mexico

Painted Bricks: Evangelo's, Santa Fe New Mexico:



This will be an unusual entry for this site, as its a type of private memorial, basically, in an unusual setting.

This is the tavern sign for Evangelo's in Santa Fe, New Mexico, featuring the famous Life Magazine cover photograph of Angelo Klonis, the founder of the tavern. The late Mr. Klonis was a soldier during World War Two when this photograph of him was taking by Life photographer Eugene Smith.  Konis, a Greek immigrant, opened this bar in his adopted home town in the late 1960s, at which time his identify as the soldier photographed by Smith was not widely known.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial, Washington D.C.


This interesting memorial depicts FDR in a manner which he generally sought to be depicted in life, that is in his wheel chair.  Roosevelt strove to appear in public as able to walk, even though he cold only do so with difficulty and with the aid of braces.

This memorial shows an older Roosevelt, and is therefore perhaps fitting for a memorial on this page.  In a way, FDR was one of the casualties of World War Two, having been worn down increasingly by the burden of his office during the war years.

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Scenes from the Arlington National Cemetary



 Tomb of the Unknowns.

















 The grave of Audi Murphy, the most decorated soldier of World War Two.
























Martin Luther King Memorial, Washington DC.













Martin Luther King Memorial in Washington DC.  Most of the memorials on this site are war memorials, but there's a few exceptions and this is one.  Martin Luther King was, of course, the central figure of the Civil Rights movement in the early 1960s, and died not unexpectedly as part of that cause.