Dwight D. Eisenhower - Multi-War Memorial - Riverside Park - Grants Pass, OR
N 42° 25.714 W 123° 19.590
10T E 473142 N 4697413
This multi-war memorial and quote are located in the heart of Riverside Park.
Waymark Code: WMN6TM
Location: Oregon, United States
Date Posted: 01/06/2015
Views: 1
Located in the heart of Riverside Park are a few memorials and plaques dedicated to men and women of various wars. This multi-war memorial reads:
TO THE AMERICAN VETERANS OF THE KOREAN, VIETNAM, AND PERSIAN GULF WARS.ALL WHO SHALL HEREAFTER LIVE IN FREEDOM WILL BE REMINDED THAT TO THESE MEN, WOMEN AND THEIR COMRADES WE OWE A DEBT TO BE PAID WITH GRATEFUL REMEMBRANCE OF THEIR SACRIFICE AND THE HIGH RESOLVE THAT THE CAUSE FOR WHICH THEY SERVED, SHALL LIVE ETERNALLY. |
The inscription on the memorial plaque is taken from words quoted by then-President Dwight D. Eisenhower that appear in a huge, 500-page, leather-bound book; a roll of honour to the 28,000 Americans who died in World War II and which resides in St. Paul's Cathedral in London and within a chapel dedicated to all Americans. The full quote from Eisenhower in the book reads:
Each name inscribed in this book is a story of personal tragedy and a grieving family; a story repeated endlessly in white crosses girdling the globe. The Americans, whose names here appear, were part of the price that free men have been forced a second time to pay in this century to defend human liberty and rights. Fittingly, this roll of honor has been enshrined by the Mother Country of all English-speaking democracies in this special chapel of St Paul’s, once a target of barbaric attack. Here, we and all who shall hereafter live in freedom will be reminded that to these men and their comrades of all the Allies we owe a debt to be paid with grateful remembrance of their sacrifice and with the high resolve that the cause for which they died shall live eternally.
The book was formally unveiled in 1958 at a service to dedicate the Chapel, attended by The Queen and American Vice President, Richard M Nixon. President Eisenhower visited the chapel and the roll of honour a year later.