Statue of Henry Bergh
Henry Bergh is a statue by American artist James H. Mahoney located at the Wisconsin Humane Society in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. The bronze statue portrays Henry Bergh, the father of the humane movement in the United States,[2] holding a cane in his proper right hand and petting a dog with a bandaged paw with his proper left hand. It was created in 1891 and stands 9 feet high.[1]
Description of the sculpture
Mahoney's statue is a full-length bronze of Henry Bergh. He wears a frock coat, vest, pants and boots, while holding a cane and petting a wounded dog. The statue's granite base has the raised inscription HENRY BERGH. The right front of the base reads American Bronze Co. Chicago Illinois. There is also a circular plaque on the base that reads The Wisconsin Humane Society, as well as a United States seal with a ribbon and star that included a founder's mark.[1] The circular plaque was added to the base in 1941 in honor of its 50th dedication anniversary.[1]
Henry Bergh grew up an aristocrat and graduated from Columbia College in the 1830s. Following college he became a diplomat at the American Delegation in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was during this time that he noticed the drivers' cruel treatment of horses. Once back in America he realized that Americans also mistreated their horses by requiring them to pull very heavy loads. Bergh traveled to England to learn about their humane society and, upon his return to America in 1866, founded the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. This was subsequently expanded in 1877 into the American Humane Association, which included both the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.[3] The Wisconsin Humane Society was founded in 1879 with Richard D. Whitehead serving as its superintendent. Whitehead commissioned the sculpture, raising the $14,000 needed to create it.[1] The statue was placed in the heavily trafficked Market Square on April 29, 1891 and dedicated with an elaborate ceremony that included releasing white pigeons to fly over the statue, and having a pony be the first to drink from the trough.
The statue was unveiled on April 29, 1891,[4] shortly after the 25th anniversary of Bergh's founding of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. It was originally placed atop an animal watering trough in downtown Milwaukee's Market Square, near the present City Hall.[3]
Location history
"The Milwaukee City Hall was built on Market Square in 1895, increasing the traffic around the Bergh monument. By 1941 few horses were seen on the streets of Milwaukee and it was decided to convert the watering trough to a flower bed."[3] Since then it has been moved several times. It was first moved to the Wisconsin Humane Society in 1966 when the Marshall and Ilsley Bank planned to build a new structure on its site. Because the statue was too heavy to transport over Milwaukee's bridges, it was taken without the watering trough. The statue has moved with the Wisconsin Humane Society as it has changed locations over the years. It currently stands in front of the Humane Society's building on West Wisconsin Avenue. According to the Wisconsin Humane Society's website, this is the only known statue of Henry Bergh in the United States.[5]
Condition of the statue
"Treatment completed to restore statue in June 2013."[citation needed]
The sculptor
James H. Mahoney was the sculptor who produced this bronze statue in 1891.[1] Mahoney is also credited as one of the artists who produced the National Monument to the Forefathers in Plymouth, Massachusetts.[6]
See also
- Animalier
- R.D. Whitehead Monument
References
- ^ a b c d e f "Henry Bergh, (sculpture)". Inventory of American Sculpture, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. Smithsonian AmericanArt Museum. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
- ^ "Henry Bergh - Father of the Humane Movement". Wisconsin Humane Society. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
- ^ a b c Buck, Diane M. and Virginia A. Palmer (1995). Outdoor Sculpture in Milwaukee: A Cultural and Historical Guidebook. The State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison
- ^ "A statue to Henry Bergh" (PDF). New York Times. 30 April 1891. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
- ^ "Wisconsin Humane Society - Our History & Henry Bergh". Wisconsin Humane Society. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
- ^ "Search Results: "Mahoney, James H., sculptor"". Inventory of American Sculpture, Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. Smithsonian AmericanArt Museum. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
- v
- t
- e
- The Victorious Charge
- Family
- The Calling
- Wisconsin Workers Memorial
- Wind Leaves
- Birds of Knowledge of Good and Evil
- The Great Double
- Woodland Indian and Whistling Swans
- Solomon Juneau
- Leif, the Discoverer
- Letter Carriers' Monument
- Argo
- Bronze Fonz
- Walkways Through the Wall
- Abraham Lincoln
- George Washington
- Referee
- Immigrant Mother
- King Gambrinus
- RiverSculpture!
- Gertie the Duck
- General Douglas MacArthur
- The Spirit of Polonia
- World War I Memorial Flagpole
- Pedestrian Drama
- Midsummer Carnival Shaft
- Acqua Grylli
- Laureate
- Diana
- Trigon
- Pere Jacques Marquette
- Spanish–American War Soldier
- Ruins X
- Ex Stasis
- City Yard
- Mahatma Gandhi Memorial
- Peter John
- A Beam of Sun to Shake the Sky
- Rainbow Machine
- Topiary Lucere
- Dancing Through Life
- Mother Teresa Monument
- Jacques Marquette
- You Rise Above the World
- The Last Alarm
- John Plankinton
- Celebrating the Arts
- Christian Wahl
- Elk
- On Watch
- Pattern
- Lapham Memorial
- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
- Music
- Fishing
- Spirit of the Firefighter
- Dauntless Guardian
- Buildings 1992
- Gear 23
- All in the Air at Once
- First Flight
- Sea of the Ear
- Kindred Ties
- Cleopatra's Wedge
- Float
- Polyphony
- Boy with Goose
- Eight Stone Lions
- Three Bronze Discs
- Holocaust Memorial
- Happy-Go-Luckies of Nature and Technology
- Blue Dress Park
- Sentinels
- Hermes
- Milwaukee
- Eclipse
- 'X' Intertwining
- Compass
- Erastus B. Wolcott
- Sharing the Load
- Robert Burns
- Near Here
- Compass
- Walk Like a River
- Spillover II
- Tip
- Jantar-Mantar
- Cass Street Park
- Brady Street Beasts
- Connect
- Fairies Candles
- Menomonee
- Count Casimir Pulaski
- Spirit of Commerce
- Bay View Series
- A Place to Sit
- Stratiformis
- The Hill Climber
- Deflected Jets
- Angel in a Cage
- R. D. Whitehead Monument
- Memorial for Belle Austin Jacobs
- T. A. Chapman Memorial
- Nature Belle
- Oops, Missed
- Space Game
- Engine Company No. 10
- William A. Starke Memorial
- Steel Reborn
- Red Flower Rising
- Equestrian statue of Tadeusz Kościuszko
- Patrick Cudahy Memorial
- SOARING
- Two Opposites Reaching Up Toward the Peak of Progress
- Edge Elements
- Ribbons VI
- Bridge
- Stone Bracelet
- Untitled
- Quartet
- Tending the Fire
- Bird and Fish
- The Sower
- The Reaper
- Giving Gifts
- Watertower
- Henry Bergh
- Goethe–Schiller Monument
- Chrysalis
- The Ideal Scout
- Uptown Triangles
- Tree of Life
- Magic Grove
- Steuben Monument
- Kneeling Camels
- Teamwork
- Aaron Monument
- Yount Monument
- Selig Monument
- Uecker Monument
- Fire and Water
- Vliet Street Commons
- Miller Valley Veterans Monument
- Children of the West End
- Sinai
- Wandering Rocks
- Sea Form (Atlantic)
- Sky Fence
- Floating Sculpture No. 3
- Mo, Ni, Que
- Trio
- Two-Piece Reclining Figure No. 9
- Way Four
- Compound Junior
- Salem No. 7
- Bremen Town Musicians
- Ancestor
- Queen of Sheba
- Rhythm in Space
- Peristyle, Three Lines
- Orizzontale
- Embrace
- Ursa Major
- Three Graces
- Large Torso, Arch
- Double Up
- Upstart
- The Lovers (di Suvero)
- Poland
- Axeltree
- Orbits
- Ritual II
- Hara
- Olympus
- The Lovers (Daen)
- Tensione No. 2
- The Source
- Rainbow
- Unfolding
- Vegetative Sculpture I
- Round About
- Lodgepole
- Twist for Max
- Bench-Stone
- Windfall
- Knife Tree
- Conversations with Magic Stones, Figure Three
- Conversations with Magic Stones (Magic Stone Three)
- Kumo
- Untitled
- Arch
- Epicenter
- Epicenter II
- III Columns
- Flight
- Pin Oak I