Boston Common

Black Soldiers Monument Returns to Boston Common After $3M Restoration

Long considered one of the nation's greatest sculptures, the Shaw Memorial captures the stirring call to arms answered by Black soldiers who served in the unit, which was popularized in the 1989 Oscar-winning movie "Glory"

NBC10 Boston

The newly renovated Robert Gould Shaw and Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial is lifted into place at the edge of Boston Common, opposite the Massachusetts State House. It will be unveiled at a later date.

A monument honoring a famed Civil War unit of Black soldiers has returned to downtown Boston, following a $3 million restoration.

The bronze relief at the center the Robert Gould Shaw and Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial was hoisted back into place Wednesday on the Boston Common across from the Statehouse with the help of a crane.

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The relief remained wrapped and crated; officials said they need to do more work on the structure before the monument can be fully visible.

The work has been undergoing restoration for months at a studio in Woburn. Crews have also been onsite restoring the monument's marble and stone foundation. Officials say the project is on track to be substantially complete sometime next month.

A vacant plot of land in Hyde Park is the location where the 54th Regiment fought 160 years ago. Today, a development proposal is in place to build town homes on the land, some are fighting to preserve it.

Long considered one of the nation's greatest sculptures, the Shaw Memorial captures the stirring call to arms answered by Black soldiers who served in the unit, which was popularized in the 1989 Oscar-winning movie "Glory."

American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens spent 14 years creating the monument, unveiling it to fanfare in 1897.

But the work is also among those that has faced scrutiny amid last year's national reckoning on racism sparked by the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police.

The work depicts Shaw, the unit's white commanding officer, riding on horseback while his Black soldiers walk in the background, a dynamic that some suggest is problematic.

A controversial statue in Boston featuring President Abraham Lincoln with a freed Black man on his knees was removed Tuesday from Park Square.
Copyright The Associated Press
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