Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-qxdb6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T04:10:34.446Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“A Foothold in Europe”: The Aesthetics and Politics of American War Cemeteries in Western Europe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

Ron Robin
Affiliation:
Ron Robin is Senior Lecturer in History, Department of General History, University of Haifa, Haifa 31905, Israel.

Extract

Twenty American military cemeteries dot the pastoral countryside of western Europe. Casualties of the Great War, numbering 31,000, are buried in eight sites: 73,000 of America's 93,000 overseas burials from the Second World War are interred in twelve European cemeteries. These “silent cities” are monuments to an enduring result of global conflict: a forceful American presence in the cultural and political landscapes of other countries. The cemeteries' standardized styles, laconic epitaphs, and their removal from the sphere of family and community erase much of the sense of individual tragedy associated with premature death. Indeed, the American burial grounds were not meant to be mere memorials; they were designed primarily as representations of the American spirit abroad and as a political “foothold in Europe,” according to one of their prominent exponents. They were planned to evoke a common national cause rather than mourn the death of young soldiers. Their foreign context, the New York Times stated, meant that they would “stand forever as symbols of America, our spirit and our aesthetic.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Shenton, Edward, “They Will Not Be Forgotten,” Saturday Evening Post, 227 (14 08 1954), 59Google Scholar.

2 Louchheim, Aline, “Memorials to Our War Dead Abroad,” New York Times, 15 01 1950, sec. 2, p. 10Google Scholar.

3 Mayo, James, War Memorials as Political Landscapes; The American Experience and Beyond (New York: Praeger, 1988), 143Google Scholar.

4 Ralph Hayes, “A Report to the Secretary of War on American Military Dead Overseas” (Washington, 1920), 14, Commission of Fine Arts files, Record Group 66, National Archives, Washington D.C. (Hereafter RG 66.)

5 “Record of ABMC Proceedings,” 17 March 1925, 7 March 1927, 28 Oct. 1930, American Battle Monuments Commission files, Record Group 117, National Archives, Washington D.C. (Hereafter RG 117.)

6 United States Congress. House of Representatives. Committee on Foreign Affairs. Sixty-Seventh Congress, Hearings on H.R. 9634 and H.R. 10801; American Battle Monuments Commission (Washington D.C., 1922), 1424, 55–9Google Scholar.

7 RG 117: Letter from Brigadier Thomas North to Miss Dorothy Grafly (16 March 1950).

8 RG 66: Letter from Charles Moore, Chairman, to the Quartermaster General (12 May 1923). RG 117: “Proceedings of the ABMC” (2 Oct. 1923), 4–5.

9 On the Gettysburg cemetery see Patterson, John S., “A Patriotic Landscape; Gettysburg, 1863-1913,” Prospects, 7 (1983), 315332CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

10 RG 117: Paul Cret, “United States Monument near Chateau Thierry” (30 Sept. 1927).

11 Reilly, Henry, “Pershing's Job Today,” World's Work, 57 (11 1928), 30Google Scholar.

12 Pershing, John, “Our National War Memorials in Europe,” The National Geographic Magazine, 65 (01 1934), 5Google Scholar.

13 Panofsky, Erwin, Tomb Sculpture: Its Changing Aspects From Ancient Egypt to Berrini (London: Thames and Hudson, 1976), 2Google Scholar.

14 Grossman, Elizabeth, “Architecture for a Public Client: The Monuments and Chapels of the American Battle Monuments Commission,” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 43 (05 1984), 135CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

15 RG 66: Egerton Swartout to ABMC (15 March 1927); James L. Greenleaf to H. P. Caemmerer, Secretary of the Commission of Fine Arts (7 April 1927).

16 RG 66: ABMC, “Report on Survey in Europe, August-September, 1946,” 2.

17 Walker, Howell, “Here Rest in Honored Glory,” National Geographic Magazine, 44 (06 1957), 740Google Scholar.

18 “Report on Survey in Europe.”

19 Harbeson, John, “A Collaborative Undertaking,” A.I.A. Journal, 36 (08 1961), 34Google Scholar.

20 War Memorials,” Architectural Forum, 81 (12 1944), 100Google Scholar.

21 Ibid., 96. See also Archibald Macliesh, “Memorials are for Remembrance,” ibid., 81 (Sept. 1944), 11–113, 170; Mumford, Lewis, “Monuments and Memorials,” Good Housekeeping, 120 (01 1945), 17, 106–8Google Scholar; Commission of Fine Arts, Report on War Memorials (Washington D.C., 1947)Google Scholar.

22 Louchheim, “Memorials to Our War Dead Abroad.”

23 New York Times, 16 Sept. 1966, 18. See also ibid., 15 May 1966, sec. 4, 15, 29 May 1966, sec. 4, 13.