Liberty Memorial Poppies, Kansas City, Missouri is a photograph by Catherine Sherman which was uploaded on November 12th, 2018.
Liberty Memorial Poppies, Kansas City, Missouri
Liberty Memorial Poppies, Kansas City, Missouri by Catherine Sherman.
Although, snow was forecast, a friend suggested we make a trip to the... more
Title
Liberty Memorial Poppies, Kansas City, Missouri
Artist
Catherine Sherman
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
"Liberty Memorial Poppies, Kansas City, Missouri" by Catherine Sherman.
Although, snow was forecast, a friend suggested we make a trip to the final night of the Poppy Display at the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, a 45-minute drive. I was reluctant to go, but I'm so happy that we did. It was a very moving experience. And the snow waited until after we got home.
Although The National World War Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, is far from the battle zones of World War I, few Americans were untouched by the sacrifices made in that war. My grandfather, a farmer in South Dakota, was deployed to France at the end of World War I.
In 2018, "For the nine days leading up to the Armistice, the official WWI memorial of the United States was illuminated with a nearly 55 million pixel, 800,000 lumens display featuring more than 5,000 poppies each evening in a massive and moving light installation. Every 15 minutes, a special presentations of images, footage and details about World War I will appear. Peace and Remembrance marks the centennial of the Armistice of 1918 that brought an end to WWI, with each day of the installation leading up to the Armistice signifying one million of the total nine million combatant deaths of the conflict."
The Liberty Memorial is the home of the National World War I Museum and Memorial of the United States. Opened to the public as the Liberty Memorial museum in 1926, it was designated in 2004 by the United States Congress as America's official museum dedicated to World War I.
In 2004, construction started on a new 80,000-square-foot (7,400 m2) expansion and the Edward Jones Research Center underneath the original memorial. The year that this was completed, Liberty Memorial was designated a National Historic Landmark (September 20, 2006)
Why Poppies?
In the spring of 1915, shortly after losing a friend in Ypres, a Canadian doctor, Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae was inspired by the sight of poppies growing in battle-scarred fields to write a now famous poem called 'In Flanders Fields'. After the First World War, the poppy was adopted as a symbol of Remembrance.
Featured in "Hodge Podge" group (08/01/2023)
Uploaded
November 12th, 2018
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Luther Fine Art
Congratulations! Your fantastic photographic art has been chosen as a Camera Art feature! You are invited to archive your work in the Features Archive discussion as well as any other discussion in which it would fit!