Saturday, October 28, 2017

1886 STATUE OFLIBERTY


STATUE OF LIBERTY
1886


October 26, 1886, the Statue of Liberty was dedicated on this day by then president Grover
Cleveland in New York Harbor. The statue was a friendship gift from the people of France to the
people of the United State of America.

The statue was originally known as “Liberty Enlightening the World” prroposed by the
French historian Edouard de Laboulaye and designed by the French sculptor Frederic Auguste
Barthholdt.

It is 151 feet high, the figure of a woman with an uplifted arm holding a torch. The frame
of steel was designed by Eugene Emmanuel Viollet le Duc and Alexandre Gustave Eiffel. Effel
designed the Effel Tower of Paris.

1877 Congress approved the site on Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor. The statue was
completed in France in 1884 in May and in August of that year Americans laid the corner stone for
the pedstal. A year later, the dismantled Statue of Liberty arrived in New York in more that 200
packing cases. The copper sheets were reassembled and the last rivit was fitted the 28th October
1886.

The Statue of Liberty was made a National Monument in 1924, and in 1856 Bedloes Island
was renamed Liberty Island.

Ellis Island, adjacent to Bedloe's Island, was opened as the chief entry station to immigrants
to the United States of America which were welcomed into New York Harbor by sight of “Lady
Liberty”.

Inscribed on the pedestal is a 'sonnet' “The New Colossus” by american poet Emma Lazarus.
“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of
your teeming shore, send these, through the golden door”.



Abstract by Harrison, October 28, 2017, of, “This Day In History” world wide web.com

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