
Let’s get something straight right now: Nobody is buried beneath the Doughboy Statue in Overton Park. Instead, the massive monument honors “the memory of Memphis and Shelby County men who gave their lives to their country in the Great War,” according to the massive plaque mounted on its base. And back then, they were talking about World War I. The plaque holds the “1917-1919 Honor Roll” and carries 230 names. I am ashamed to say there’s not a Lauderdale among them.
The old Doughboy has endured its own battles, that’s for sure. It was the brainchild of the local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, who raised funds “with the aid of a grateful public and schoolchildren” (according to a smaller plaque mounted on the back of the base) and hired an out-of-town sculptor named Nancy Coonsman Hahn to erect a monument to America’s fighting spirit. Although I’ve been unable to find out just how much the piece cost — and let me tell you it is indeed one big chunk of bronze — I did turn up old newspaper articles that tracked a subscription drive to raise funds for its massive stone base, and that alone was $3,500.
Anyway, the statue — depicting a grim-faced U.S. Army soldier clambering over a rock with his bayonet drawn — went up in Overton Park on September 21, 1926. And some people were certainly not happy with it. Michael Abt, a Tech High School art teacher and sculptor (who gained fame for designing most of the Cotton Carnival floats), caused quite a stir in the newspapers back then by calling the statue “the attack of a vicious beast.”
What’s more, he griped to the local Artists Guild that it defies “every elementary principle known to sculpture: bad modeling, bad composition, and bad mounting. The figure is distorted. Look at the arms in proportion to the rest of the body. The clay is mistreated, the general attitude is unnatural, and a dozen — yes, dozens — of other things.”
Worst of all, Abt said, was that it “carries the spirit of a beast, instead of the spirit of noble defense of a cause.”
The sculptor herself, however, stood by her guns (so to speak). “The statue seemed overwhelmingly huge in my studio,” Hahn told the newspapers, when she came to Memphis to see her work in place, “but I like the way it fits in with the surroundings at the park, and I think the location is just right.” Memphian Frank Hubert Venn, who designed the base, had this to say about Abt’s criticism: nothing. “I have nothing to say,” he told reporters. “The Doughboy speaks for itself. He’s a soldier — a fighting man. That’s all.”
But that was NOT all. A few months later, somebody griped that the soldier’s stance was all wrong. It seems there are very particular rules to follow in hand-to-hand combat, and if you’re charging toward the enemy and about to gut them with your bayonet, you’d darn well better have your left foot forward. Our Doughboy is stepping forward with his right.
This caused quite a brouhaha, until someone finally checked with the U.S. Army, and under the manual Instructions No. 5-25: The Soldier: Instructions and Qualifications with the Bayonet, it was discovered that under certain circumstances “it is perfectly correct for a soldier to put his right foot forward,” especially in the “long thrust” and “short thrust” positions. It’s also okay if you are doing a “right parry.” If, however, you are doing the “low parry left” manuever, you’d better keep your left foot forward, or you might stumble and fall, and boy, that would be embarrassing.
Anyway, the Doughboy has survived these and other attacks (from paint to pigeons) over the years. For years, the statue was surrounded by a thick hedge, so from certain angles it looked like he was clambering over a hill, but that got pulled down. The whole area has been revamped in recent years, with other monuments erected to soldiers lost in other wars. For a “vicious beast,” I think he looks mighty grand.
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In retrospect, under the tunic was probably not the best place to take refuge during a thunderstorm.
Not if there was lightning, no. You might as well run around the park with a giant lightning rod bolted to your head. My uncle Lance did that on more than one occasion, which is why we called him Sparky.
I'm wondering if the white fountain-looking object to the left of the Doughboy is still there. I have some pictures of my mother and grandmother standing by it when my mother was very young. She is 89 now.
I'm not certain why anyone would think that the soldier was engaged in hand-to-hand combat at that point in time. I always imagined that the signal had been given to advance and he was walking up out of one of the trenches.
I have been searching for years that statue because I found a very old photo of the Doughboy in my grandmother's photo collection. It had to have been taken in the early 30's or maybe earlier; since of course it is not dated but it does have the hedges spoken about and my grandmother with her sister in law are standing in front of the monument and my grandmother's husband is standing on top of the wall which I am quite certain should not have been done but probably has been hundreds of times by young men or women. I am thankful to now put a place and a name to where the photo was taken and also a Thank You to all of the doughboys and all who have served since. I would like to know where I could find a list of the men on the plaque as my grandmother may have been there to visit for a reason.
sincerely,
RJ
Cinti