The Jefferson Memorial is a monument in Washington, DC to Thomas Jefferson. It combines a low neo-classic saucer dome with a portico, as in the Pantheon.


Jefferson Memorial in Washington, DC

By 1930, there were monuments in Washington commemorating great United States presidents such as Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. President Franklin Roosevelt thought that Thomas Jefferson also deserved a monument. In 1934, following his initiative, Congress passed a resolution to create a monument commemorating Jefferson. The memorial was designed by John Russell Pope,(1874 - 1937), the architect of the National Gallery of Art. It reflects characteristics of buildings designed by Jefferson such as Monticello and the Rotunda, which were a result of his fascination with Roman architecture. It bears a close resemblance to the Pantheon of Rome. The cornerstone was laid in 1939 and the monument cost slightly more than $3 million. It was officially dedicated in 1943, after Pope's death. One of the last American public monuments in the Beaux-Arts tradition, it was severely even criticised as it was being built, following the modernist argument that dressing 20th-century buildings like Greek and Roman temples constitutes a "tired architectural lie." More than 60 years ago, Pope responded with silence to critics who dismissed him as part of an enervated architectural elite practicing "styles that are safely dead".

The interior of the memorial has a 19 foot tall, 10,000 pound marble statue of Jefferson which was added four years after the dedication, and the interior walls are engraved with passages from Jefferson's writings. The 129 foot dome is 4 feet thick and the memorial weighs 32,000 tons.

The site of the monument, called the Tidal Basin is enhanced with the massed planting of cherry trees, the gift of the people of Japan..

External links

Reference

  • Steven McLeod Bedford, John Russell Pope: Architect of Empire, 1998