Monument to the 56th United States Colored Infantry, Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery (Lemay, MO)

monument_56thinfantry.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

Monument to the 56th United States Colored Infantry, Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery (Lemay, MO)

Subject

Subject (Topic)
Men--United States Colored Troops
Associations--Military
American Midwest
Public art
Public sculpture
Subject (Object Type)
Commemorative sculpture

Description

The stone obelisk, which stands on a square stone base, honors the memory of the 175 African American soldiers of the 56th United States Colored Infantry who died of cholera in August 1866. The soldiers were originally buried at the city's old quarantine hospital near the Mississippi River. In 1939, responding to the organizing efforts of local citizens, the War Department reburied the soldiers at the Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery. In the summer of 2014, the Veterans Administration, at the urging of local community members, placed a marker next to the obelisk that includes the names of the 118 soldiers of the 56th U.S. Colored Infantry who are buried at the site, plus 55 soldiers whose remains were never recovered.

Creator

Unknown

Source

Mary Delach Leonard, St. Louis National Public Radio

Date

ca. 1866

Contributor

Surviving members of the 56th United States Colored Troops

Format

JPEG

Language

English

Type

Visual Arts-Sculpture

Coverage

Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, 2900 Sheridan Rd, St. Louis, MO 63125, United States

Still Image Item Type Metadata

Original Format

Sculpture

Tags

Citation

Unknown, “Monument to the 56th United States Colored Infantry, Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery (Lemay, MO),” CMSP - Beta Test, accessed September 20, 2024, https://community-sourcing-beta-test.slaverymonuments.org/items/show/1110.

Geolocation