Statue of Thomas Brackett Reed
{{Short description|Statue in Portland, Maine}}
{{Use American English|date=September 2021}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2021}}
{{Infobox monument|name=Thomas Brackett Reed|image=Western Prom and Brackett Reed Statue.jpg|caption=The statue in 2011|location=Western Promenade, Portland, Maine, United States|designer=Burr Churchill Miller|material=Bronze
Granite (pedestal)|height={{convert|20|ft|m}}
Pedestal: {{convert|10|ft|m}}
Statue: {{convert|10|ft|m}}|dedicated=August 31, 1910|complete=1908|dedicated_to=Thomas Brackett Reed|type=Statue|coordinates={{coord|43|39|0|N|70|16|35|W|display=inline, title}}|map_image=Maine#United States|builder=Massachusetts Monumental Company (contractors)
Sheidow Bronze Corporation (foundry)|length={{Convert|8|ft|m}}|width={{Convert|10|ft|m}}}}
Thomas Brackett Reed is a monumental statue located on the Western Promenade in Portland, Maine, United States. Dedicated in 1910, the statue was designed by sculptor Burr Churchill Miller and honors Thomas Brackett Reed, a politician from Maine who served for several years as the speaker of the United States House of Representatives.
Background
= Erection =
Thomas Brackett Reed was born in Portland, Maine in 1839. He became a politician and served as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1877 to 1899.{{Cite web|title=Thomas Brackett "Czar" Reed|url=https://www.publicartportland.org/project/thomas-brackett-czar-reed-sculpture/|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160714175013/https://www.publicartportland.org/project/thomas-brackett-czar-reed-sculpture/|archive-date=July 14, 2016|access-date=September 24, 2021|website=Public Art Portland}} For several years he served as the speaker of the House. Reed was a divisive figure during this time, as he significantly increased the power of the office of the speaker, leading to some critics labeling him a "czar". He died in 1902.{{Cite web|title=Thomas Brackett Reed Statue|url=http://www.markers.portlandculturalhistory.org/items/show/50|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210924190934/http://www.markers.portlandculturalhistory.org/items/show/50|archive-date=September 24, 2021|access-date=September 24, 2021|website=Portland Cultural History}}
On April 4, 1905, the Portland, Maine City Council approved a resolution calling for the erection of a monument in Reed's honor.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=1}} The city council formed a committee to oversee the resolution's execution and on May 19, 1905, several prominent Portland citizen joined this group and formed the Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=1}} This association was officially chartered by the Maine Legislature on March 20, 1907,{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=2}} with Joseph W. Symonds as its president.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=1}} On August 5 of that year, Portland's government set aside a plot of land for the monument to stand on,{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=6}} located on the Western Promenade near where Reed had grown up. Meanwhile, the association continued their fundraising efforts, with a significant contribution coming from Augustus G. Paine Sr.,{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=2}} and on May 8, 1908, the association signed a contract with American sculptor Burr Churchill Miller to create a statue based on a design he had previously submitted.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=5}} The statue was cast that year at the sculptor's studio in Paris,{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=61}} with the total cost of the project being around $35,000 or $40,000.{{Cite web|title=Thomas Brackett Reed, (sculpture).|url=https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=16328E7B834W7.4011&profile=ariall&source=~!siartinventories&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100001~!333172~!2|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210928140944/https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=16328E7B834W7.4011&profile=ariall&source=~%21siartinventories&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full%3D3100001~%21333172~%212|archive-date=September 28, 2021|access-date=September 28, 2021|website=Smithsonian Institution Research Information System}}{{Cite journal|date=October 1, 1910|title=A Statue to Thomas B. Reed|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ligjAQAAMAAJ|journal=Bulletin of the American Iron and Steel Association|volume=XLIV|issue=12|pages=91}} The Massachusetts Monument Company served as the contractors for the monument. Prior to the statue being transported to Maine, it was exhibited at the Paris Salon.{{Cite journal|date=September 2, 1910|title=Unveiling of the Reed Statue|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wcM7AQAAMAAJ|journal=American Economist|volume=XLVI|issue=10|pages=114}}
= Dedication =
The monument's dedication ceremony was held on August 31, 1910.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=6}} The events began with Chandler's Band playing "American Overture" and was followed by an invocation given by the Reverend William H. Fenn. Two addresses were then given by Paine and Symonds, after which the band played the "Pilgrim" chorus from the opera Tannhäuser.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=6}} Initially, the dedication ceremony was to continue outside, but inclement weather caused some festivities to be moved in-doors.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=22}} As a result, the statue was officially unveiled following Symonds' speech by Reed's daughter Katherine Reed Balentine and his infant grandson Thomas Reed Balentine.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=61}} Miller was then introduced to the crowd by Symonds, who gave congratulatory words to the sculptor.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=61}} The monument was then ceremonially given by Symonds to the mayor of Portland, who accepted the gift on behalf of the city.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=62}} After the ceremony was moved in-doors to the nearby State Street Church, a poem was read by the Reverend Edward N. Pomeroy (a childhood friend of Reed's) and U.S. Representative Samuel W. McCall, the orator for the dedication, gave a speech about Reed.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|pp=22–25}} The ceremonies were then concluded with a benediction given by the Reverend Asa Dalton.{{sfn|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910|p=64}}
In 1989, a dedicatory plaque was added to the monument. The Sheidow Bronze Corporation was responsible for casting the plaque, which was donated to the city by two individuals. In 1994, the monument was surveyed as part of the Save Outdoor Sculpture! project.
Design
The monument consists of a bronze statue standing upon a pedestal made of Red Beach Maine granite. Sources differ on the exact dimensions of the monument, with the Smithsonian Institution Research Information System giving the statue's height as {{Convert|10|ft|m}}, while the pedestal stands {{Convert|10|ft|m}} and has side lengths of {{Convert|8|ft|m}} and {{Convert|10|ft|m}}.{{refn|group=note|Contemporary sources from around the time of the monument's dedication give the statue a height of {{Convert|10.5|ft|m}}, while Public Art Portland gives the statue's height as {{Convert|8|ft|m}} and the pedestal's height as {{Convert|9|ft|m}}.}} Reed is wearing a suit underneath a vest and knee-length coat and holds a scroll in his left hand, while his right hand is raised near his hip. The front of the pedestal bears Reed's full name, while a plaque on the back of the pedestal bears the following inscription: THOMAS BRACKETT "CZAR" REED / STATESMAN AND MAN OF CONSCIENCE / 1839–1902 / PORTLAND NATIVE / BOWDOIN COLLEGE - CLASS OF 1860 / CIVIL WAR VETERAN / MAINE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 1868–1869 / ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MAINE 1870–1872 / UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVE 1877–1899 / SPEAKER OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 1889–1891 AND 1895–1899.
Notes
{{reflist|group=note}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- {{Cite book|url=http://archive.org/details/cu31924030913713|title=Exercises at the Unveiling of the Statue of Thomas Brackett Reed, at Portland, Maine, August Thirty-First, Nineteen Hundred and Ten|publisher=Stephen Berry Company|others=Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|year=1910|ref={{harvid|Thomas Brackett Reed Memorial Association|1910}}}}
{{Public art in Portland, Maine}}
Category:1910 establishments in Maine
Category:Bronze sculptures in Maine
Category:Outdoor sculptures in Maine
Category:West End (Portland, Maine)
Category:Monuments and memorials in Portland, Maine