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At long last, ground broken for Eisenhower memorial in Washington


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At long last, ground broken for Eisenhower memorial in Washington

By Ian Simpson

 

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FILE PHOTO: Architect Frank Gehry arrives from the Cross Hall of the White House prior to a Presidential Medal of Freedom ceremony in Washington, U.S., November 22, 2016. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Construction of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National Memorial kicked off symbolically on Thursday after years of opposition to the late U.S. president's $150 million monument by critics who balked at its cost and size.

 

Gilded shovels flashed as lawmakers, architect Frank Gehry and Eisenhower family members turned a trough of earth at a ceremonial groundbreaking for the four-acre (1.6-hectare) memorial to the 34th president and World War Two Allied commander.

 

"At last, at last, we're building at last," said Republican U.S. Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas, the head of the memorial's commission, as he held up the monument's building permit. "Let's get the job done."

 

Dedication of the monument just off the National Mall and near the National Air and Space Museum is anticipated for May 8, 2019, the 75th anniversary of the surrender of Nazi Germany in World War Two.

 

Congress approved the memorial in 1999, but opposition to Gehry's plans stalled it for years. Criticism focused on eight-story-high columns supporting a steel tapestry portraying the Kansas prairies where Eisenhower grew up.

 

In 2014, a House of Representatives' committee report referred to the memorial as a "five-star folly" plagued by rising costs, construction delays and design flaws.

 

The Republican president's family dropped its objections last year after Gehry reduced the size and changed the tapestry's image from Kansas farmland to Normandy beaches - the scene of the Allies' 1944 D-Day invasion of France - to better reflect Eisenhower's international stature.

 

Susan Eisenhower, the president's granddaughter, on Thursday downplayed the hurdles the memorial had faced and noted that the one to President Franklin Roosevelt had taken 43 years from conception to its opening in 1997.

 

"I'd say we're way ahead of the timeline," she said to laughter from onlookers, who included a handful of World War Two veterans.

 

Gehry's plan got final approval from Washington's planning and arts commissions this fall, and the site will be known as Eisenhower Park.

 

Some critics remain.

 

"It's a national embarrassment that we are building a grandiose, inscrutable and ugly memorial that virtually no one likes," Justin Shubow, president of the National Civic Art Society, said in an email.

 

Congress, which had long refused to fund the project, allocated $45 million for construction in the current fiscal year.

 

Republican President Donald Trump's administration is asking for another $40 million next year, and the memorial's commission also is halfway to its goal of raising $35 million in private funds.

 

(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Jonathan Oatis)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-11-03
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Seems like an awful lot of money to spend on something the neo-nazis are going to protest and deface as soon as it's finished. Then some left-winged bleeding heart lawyer will sue and it'll get covered and eventually removed to be stored next to the George Washington memorials that are now under fire. :thumbsup:

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On Jan. 17, 1961, President Dwight Eisenhower gave the nation a dire warning about what he described as a threat to democratic government. 

"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists, and will persist."

http://www.npr.org/2011/01/17/132942244/ikes-warning-of-military-expansion-50-years-later

Seems more like that the current president who proposed to massively enrich the military industrial complex would have problems with Eisenhower.

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