First Division Monument
0 sources
First Division Monument
Summary
First Division Monument is a monument[1]. It draws 25 Wikipedia views per month (monument category, ranking #108 of 809).[2]
Key Facts
- First Division Monument is the creator of Daniel Chester French[3].
- First Division Monument is the creator of Cass Gilbert[4].
- First Division Monument is located in Washington, D.C.[5].
- First Division Monument is in the country of United States[6].
- First Division Monument's image is recorded as First Division Monument, Old Executive Office Building.jpg[7].
- First Division Monument's instance of is recorded as monument[8].
- First Division Monument's owned by is recorded as National Park Service[9].
- First Division Monument's genre is recorded as public art[10].
- First Division Monument's made from material is recorded as bronze[11].
- First Division Monument's made from material is recorded as granite[12].
- First Division Monument's location is recorded as The Ellipse[13].
- First Division Monument's Commons category is recorded as First Division Monument (Washington, D.C.)[14].
- +1924-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of First Division Monument[15].
- First Division Monument's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 38.8961, 'lon': -77.0387}[16].
- First Division Monument's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03y9c40[17].
- First Division Monument's topic's main category is recorded as Category:First Division Monument[18].
- First Division Monument's Commons gallery is recorded as First Division Monument[19].
- First Division Monument's GeoNames ID is recorded as 4138638[20].
- First Division Monument's Natural Atlas ID is recorded as 1869838[21].
- First Division Monument's OpenStreetMap way ID is recorded as 792774550[22].
Body
Works and Contributions
Created works include Daniel Chester French[3], a sculptor[23], 1850–1931[24], of United States[25], awarded the Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences[26], specialised in art of sculpture[27] and Cass Gilbert[4], an architect[28], 1859–1934[29], of United States[30], awarded the Fellow of the American Institute of Architects[31], specialised in architecture[32].
Why It Matters
First Division Monument draws 25 Wikipedia views per month (monument category, ranking #108 of 809).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33]