Friday, March 7, 2008

First Infantry Division

Memorial to the American Expeditionary Force
and the First Infantry Division


In 1917, the U.S. military formed the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) and prepared for combat in World War I. Under the leadership of General John "Black Jack" Pershing, the AEF produced the First Infantry Division which became the AEF's best-trained fighting force. "Big Red One"--so named for the patch on their uniforms--saw action in France beginning in October 1917.

The First Infantry Division has seen action in every major war and police action since its inception: World Wars I and II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the First Gulf War, Bosnia/Kosovo, and current operations in Iraq.

This memorial to the American Expeditionary Force is located on the grounds of the White House across from the Old Executive Office Building (17th and E Streets NW). It was erected in 1924 and sculpted by Daniel Chester French--the same sculptor who did Lincoln's statue at the Lincoln Memorial. Around the base of the memorial are the names of those of the First Infantry Division who died in World War I. To the west of the memorial is a panel to those who died in World War II. On the east side are the names of the dead from Vietnam, as well the names of the 27 members of the division who died in the First Gulf War, including the first woman and a civilian.

Photo copyright: D.C. Confidential, 10/07

3 comments:

Lucky Dip Lisa said...

I can't believe how many memorial's America has! It looks to me like it is part of the Ameican culture. That and big buildings! I like the moodiness of this photo, it has a lot of drama.

Janet Kincaid said...

Lisa: Our penchant for memorials is astounding! And Washington itself is replete with them. You can hardly walk down a single block without finding some kind of some wotsit memorial or plaque to some event or person.

On the National Mall alone, the building goes on. Now they're working on a memorial to Martin Luther King and the Civil Rights Movement, a visitor's center at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, and I'm sure eventually there will be a monument or memorial to the victims of 9/11. (Oh, wait. There already is. It's just across the river at the Pentagon.) We're memorial and monument crazy around here!

The Artful Eye said...

Yet another beauty. I like monuments.