Ohio History Journal

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Unveiling of Fort Recovery Monument

Unveiling of Fort Recovery Monument.         435

 

we see emblazoned daring and unselfish deeds of heroes who

have scaled the walls of duty and gained the parapets of the City

beyond. And, too, what a lesson it conveys! Its white teaches

purity of purpose, its red typifies the blood which has been so

freely shed in its defense, and its blue, with its constellations,

reminds us of fidelity, fidelity to our God, fidelity to ourselves,

fidelity to

"The Star Spangled Banner,

Oh long may it wave,

O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."

These soldiers have not died in vain. Our nation of one

hundred millions of free and self governing people will always

be guided by their example of heroic sacrifice, and, recognizing

the universal practice of justice, benevolence and national vir-

tue, Providence will let its blessings descend upon us and our

posterity "like unto the dews of heaven, unseen, unfelt, save

in the richness and beauty it contributes to produce, and we will

continue to walk in the path of the just which is as the dawning

light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day."

 

ADDRESS OF GENERAL J. WARREN KEIFER.

I thank you, the local Post of the Grand Army of the Re-

public, and all those in authority here for the invitation to be

present and to address those assembled on this historic occa-

sion.

This splendid monument just unveiled was fittingly erected

through the bounty of the United States, the appropriation

($25,000) therefor having been secured chiefly through the ef-

fective efforts in Congress of Hon. William E. Touvelle, a

Representative therein.

Great nations and peoples have, in the course of the ages,

erected monuments to individuals distinguished in War, as

rulers, in learning, in science, the arts, for philanthrophy, for

discoveries and for other things, but it remained to this twen-

tieth century for two South American Republics, Argentina and

Chili, to erect the first colossal statue to Christ-The Prince of

Peace-to stand in a lonely spot on their boundary line on the