Breyman Fountain and two Capitols - early 20th century and 2013 (Salem Library Historic Photos - twice, here and here) |
Just a tiny, unmarked square for the Breyman Fountain (See also Abbate Designs for more) |
In the end this may not in fact be a big problem, though it is something of a small problem.
A while back State Archives published an image of the photo illustrating its primary use. They repeated the war memorial interpretation, however: "A bronze statue of a Spanish-American War soldier topped the metal sculpture."
A horse drinking at the fountain - State Archives |
"Bronze Pioneer" - June 28th, 1904 |
"Pioneer in Bronze" - September 23rd, 1904 |
Accepted - November 4th, 1904 |
If the block face between Court and State Streets will be anchored by these very strong monuments on each corner, the landscape architects and State Parks should give strong consideration to better signage or other gestures to give the fountain more visibility and to knit it into the Willson Park site plan so that as a historical artifact it has more presence in between the pilgrimage sites on each corner.
See a little more on the Breyman house here, "The Story of Salem's First Bicycle: Ben Taylor talks with Fred Lockley"; on a family member's untimely demise, "Jessie Breyman McNary killed 100 Years Ago in Auto Crash"; and on Pioneer statues, "Guidance of Youth and the Ideology of Pioneer Mother Monuments."
Addendum, January 22nd, 2024
Here is information on the ruin of the Pioneer statue! (See the comment below on the walking tour, also.)
June 25th, 1917 |
January 22nd, 1924 |
2 comments:
Here's more on the Pioneer!
In a walking tour on "Salem's Pioneer Monuments," Cynthia Prescott writes:
"At the turn of the 20th century, New York artist Allen G. Newman sculpted an Oregon pioneer based on historic objects provided by the Breyman family of Salem, Oregon. The original zinc casting was erected near the Oregon state capitol in Salem in 1904. J. L. Mott Iron Works in New York cast numerous copies of "The Pioneer." One in Ashland, Oregon, was known locally as "Pioneer Mike." Other castings were erected on the University of Colorado campus and in Storm Lake, Iowa. None of the original statues are known to have survived. In recent years, Pioneer statues were recast for Ashland and Storm Lake. The original Salem statue was toppled by a windstorm in 1917 and never replaced."
(You may recall Prescott from a note on her book, Pioneer Mother Monuments: Constructing Cultural Memory.)
(Added clipping on the pranky wind and ruin of the statute.)
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