Lapham Memorial | |
---|---|
Artist | Albert H. Atkins |
Year | 1915 |
Type | tablet sculpture; plaque on boulder |
Dimensions | 70 cm × 94 cm (27.5 in × 37 in); 7 feet in diameter |
Location | Milwaukee |
43°04′33.5″N 87°52′58.9″W / 43.075972°N 87.883028°W |
The Lapham Memorial is a public artwork by American artist Albert H. Atkins, located near the entrance to Lapham Hall, on the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee campus. It is in memory of Increase A. Lapham, a 19th-century scientist famous for prompting the creation of the National Weather Service and recording the antiquities of Wisconsin, among other accomplishments.
Description
The relief plaque is made out of bronze and is mounted on a granite base. The plaque is approximately 27.5 inches by 37 inches and the base is approximately 50 inches by 82 inches by 82 inches, weighing 40,000 pounds. The plaque is in a landscape format featuring the bust of Increase A. Lapham in the center. The male figure has a mustache and a beard, and is wearing a high collared shirt, a bow tie, and jacket.[1] To the upper left there is an oil lamp, which represents Lapham's contribution to learning in Wisconsin. It is inscribed: "In memory of Increase Allen Lapham." There is a fish on the plaque's upper right representing his interest in the fresh water lakes and natural resources of Wisconsin. It is inscribed: "Naturalist MDCCC.XI . MDCCC.LXXV." The words inscribed below the portrait are as follows: "Erected by his friends in commemoration of his services to the cause of human knowledge and his unselfish devotion to the welfare of the people. Under the auspices of the old settlers club of Milwaukee County."[1]
Historical information
Lapham was a member of the Old Settlers' Club of Milwaukee. The club commissioned the plaque.
Location history
It was originally installed at an entrance to Lapham Park on 8th Street in Milwaukee. This was where Lapham had surveyed an Indian mound. The city began a housing project on this site in the 1960s and the plaque was moved to a drive leading to Lapham Hall on the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee campus.[2] It was later moved in front of Lapham Hall along North Maryland Avenue for better visibility.
Artist
The artist who created this plaque was Albert Henry Atkins.[3] He was an American sculptor born in 1880 in Milwaukee. He died in 1951. Atkins both lived and was an active artist in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. He was well known for his monuments and portraits in sculpture. This work is the only example of his sculpture in a public place in the city of his birth.[4]
Condition
In May 1993, Save Outdoor Sculpture! surveyed and noted it needed treatment.[1]
Other memorial
Another memorial tablet in honor of Increase A. Lapham is at Lapham Peak in Waukesha county. It was unveiled in 1917.[5]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Inventory of American Sculpture, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System (SIRIS), Smithsonian American Art Museum. Accessed May 2011.
- ↑ Rock's shift is mourned, Milwaukee Journal, May 31, 1984, Accent sect., pp. 1, 7a.
- ↑ Wisconsin Blue Book, 1929, p. 106.
- ↑ Milwaukee Lad Now Sculptor, Milwaukee Journal, Jan. 31, 1926, sect. 5, p. 4.
- ↑ The Society and the State, Wisconsin Magazine of History, 1917, v. 1, n. 1, pp. 105-106. (copy)
Sources
- Lapham, S. G. Honors a Distinguished Scientist, Americana, American Historical Magazine, (Dec.) 1915, v. 10, pp. 1050–1052. (copy)
- Bruce, W. G. Increase A. Lapham, History of Milwaukee, City and County, 1922, v. 1, pp. 123–126. (copy)
External links
- Wants Monument for Increase A. Lapham, Milwaukee Sentinel, October 23, 1910
- Giant Boulder Setting for Memorial Tablet to Pioneer Settler, Milwaukee Journal, June 17, 1915
- Will Unveil Tablet to Memory of Dr. Lapham, Milwaukee Sentinel, June 17, 1915
- Memorial Erected to Early Day Scientist, Milwaukee Journal, June 20, 1915