Vulcan statue
Vulcan statue | |
Red Mountain, Birmingham, Alabama | |
Coordinates | 33°29′30.18″N 86°47′43.86″W / 33.4917167°N 86.7955167°W |
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Area | 4 acres (1.6 ha) |
Built | 1904, 1939 |
Sculptor | Giuseppe Moretti |
NRHP reference No. | 76000333[1] |
Added to NRHP | July 6, 1976 |
The Vulcan statue is the largest
History
Construction
Commissioned by the Commercial Club of Birmingham, Italian-born
Moretti received an artist's fee of $6,000, which would be about $200,000 in 2022 dollars. The Commercial Club of Birmingham held art shows, concerts, baseball games, and many more activities to raise the estimated $15,000 ($490,000 in 2022 dollars) it would cost to build and transport the statue. It is also noted that pot metal statuettes of Vulcan were sold at both the St. Louis World's Fair and in Birmingham, Alabama for two dollars apiece to help in the accumulated costs it took to create the statue.[3]
The Vulcan statue consists of 29 cast-iron components with connecting flanges that are bolted together internally. The heaviest section is his whole head, which weighs 11,000 pounds (4,990 kg). Iron forgemen designed and executed the connection details for the statue, which originally had no internal framework and was self-supporting. The
The completed weight of the god Vulcan's figure alone is 100,000 pounds (45,359 kg). When Vulcan's anvil, block, hammer, and spearpoint are added, the statue weighs a total of 120,000 pounds (54,431 kg) and it stands on a 123-foot tall (37 m) pedestal. The statue has a chest circumference of 22 feet 6 inches (7 m) and a waist circumference of 18 feet 3 inches (6 m).
1904 World's Fair
The statue was shipped to St. Louis as Birmingham's entry into the 1904 World's Fair. Vulcan dramatically demonstrated the mineral riches and manufacturing capabilities of the Birmingham area while on display in the Louisiana Purchase Exposition's "Palace of Mines and Metallurgy". It was awarded a "Grand Prize".
When the 1904 World's Fair ended, the Vulcan statue was dismantled and returned to its home city of Birmingham, only to be left in pieces alongside the railroad tracks due to unpaid freight bills.
Alabama State Fairgrounds
The Vulcan statue was eventually re-erected at the Alabama State Fairgrounds, but the statue's arms were installed incorrectly, and the god was without his spear, which had been lost on the way from St. Louis.
With nothing to hold in its hands, Vulcan soon became an advertising figure. Over the years, Vulcan held an ice cream cone, a
Atop Red Mountain
It was not until 1936 that the statue found a suitable home, thanks to the
A nine-day festival commenced on May 7, 1939 to dedicate Vulcan Park. Evelyn Tully was crowned the Vulcan Queen. Guests of honor included the foundrymen who originally cast Vulcan. A crowd of 5,000 was present for the opening night of the festival.
In 1938 a challenge was sent out to hundreds of engineers and architects throughout the Southeast to design the base and park area. There were hundreds of submissions but a little known draftsman by the name of Carl Franklin Edins from Birmingham, Alabama was unanimously declared the winner.
To take full advantage of Vulcan's position overlooking Birmingham, the city's
In 1949, Vulcan got new neighbors, when two television stations,
Centennial facelift
To celebrate Birmingham's centennial, the area around the statue was given a $1 million facelift in 1971. The original tower was clad in Alabama marble with an elevator and observation deck added. A covered walkway also connected a gift shop and snack bar. Vulcan was repainted a rust red a few years later. Vulcan was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 6, 1976.
Unfortunately, the statue itself had, when originally placed atop the pedestal, been filled up to the chest with concrete and had begun to deteriorate seriously due to different expansion and contraction rates of concrete versus cast iron. By 1990, an engineering study found that the statue was in danger of collapse.
1999–2004 restoration
Vulcan was removed during October and November 1999 in preparations for a $14 million renovation process that saw the park and pedestal restored to its original 1938 appearance. The statue sat in Vulcan Park's parking lot until the fall of 2001, when it was shipped to Robinson Iron to be repaired. The statue itself was thoroughly inspected and repaired, with some parts, including the lost spear point, re-cast. The new and restored pieces were thoroughly coated with a durable paint system, including a light-gray finish coat dubbed "Vulcan Gray" by the specifier.
Meanwhile, in 2002, the 1971 park additions were demolished, and scaffolding went up around Vulcan's tower. Workmen cleaned and repaired the original tower. Vulcan's head and right arm went on display at the Birmingham Museum of Art while the tower was prepared.
Vulcan was re-erected on a steel armature atop his tower during June 2003, restored to its original appearance as intended by Moretti, reoriented to the east. Television stations WVTM and WBRC both provided live webcams of the reinstallation.
Shortly after the statue was reinstalled, the scaffolding came down, and a new observation deck, providing panoramic views of the area, was installed. The museum at the base was rebuilt and a new elevator was installed, but oriented so it would not be easily seen from downtown Birmingham. The original waterfalls were not rebuilt, though the stone walkways leading from the parking lot directly to Vulcan's tower were restored. The statue and park were officially reopened in 2004, celebrating Vulcan's 100th birthday. In 2004, Vulcan Park welcomed more than 100,000 visitors who took in the statue's views of downtown Birmingham.
The restoration project received a National Preservation Honor Award from the National Trust for Historic Preservation in 2006.[4]
Vulcan Park and Museum
Vulcan Park and Museum (VPM) features views of Birmingham, an interactive history museum that examines Vulcan and Birmingham's story, and a 10-acre (4 ha) urban green space. In May 2007, Vulcan Park and Museum was designated an official Birmingham Information Center by the Greater Birmingham Convention and Visitors Bureau and offers information on transportation services, restaurants, events and other cultural offerings in Birmingham.
Vulcan Park and Museum is operated by Vulcan Park Foundation, a non-profit organization with a mission to preserve and promote Vulcan as the symbol for the Birmingham region, to advance knowledge and understanding of Birmingham's history and culture, and to encourage exploration of the region.
See also
- Birmingham District
- List of statues
- List of tallest statues
- List of the tallest statues in the United States
- WVTM Channel 13 – local television station with call letter V for Vulcan
- An ode to Vulcan by Alabama poet AL.com.
References
Notes
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ a b c Glionna, John M. (April 12, 2015). "Birmingham's Vulcan statue, often the butt of jokes, remains well-loved". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Billmeier, Katherine Estes, Philip A. Morris, and J. Scott Howell, eds. Vulcan and Vulcan Park: Celebrating 100 Years of Birmingham's Colossal Icon. Birmingham, AL: Vulcan Park Foundation, 2004.
- ^ "National Trust Presents National Preservation Honor Award to Vulcan Park in Birmingham, Alabama" (Press release). National Trust for Historic Preservation. 2006-11-02. Retrieved 2009-02-04.
Bibliography
- Billmeier, Katherine Estes; Morris, Philip A.; Howell, J. Scott (2004). Vulcan and Vulcan Park: Celebrating 100 Years of Birmingham's Colossal Icon. Birmingham, AL: Vulcan Park Foundation. ISBN 0-9703157-5-9.
- Howell, J. Scott (2004). "Bringing Back the Magic: Restoring Giuseppi Moretti's Vulcan in Birmingham, Alabama". JSTOR 4126402.
- Kierstead, Matthew A. (2002). "Vulcan: Birmingham's Industrial Colossus". JSTOR 40947144.
- Morris, Philip A. (1995). Vulcan and His Times. Birmingham, AL: Birmingham Historical Society.
External links
- Vulcan Park and Museum
- The Vulcan statue on display in St. Louis at the 1904 World's Fair from St. Louis Public Library Digital Collections
- Vulcan photos and newspaper articles at the Birmingham Public Library
- Historic American Engineering Record(HAER) documentation:
- HAER No. AL-29, "Vulcan Statue & Park, Atop Red Mountain off Vulcan Road, Birmingham, Jefferson County, AL", 32 photos, 2 measured drawings, 108 data pages, 2 photo caption pages
- HAER No. AL-208, "Robinson Iron Foundry, Vulcan, 1856 Robinson Road, Alexander City, Tallapoosa County, AL", 17 photos, 2 photo caption pages
- "Vulcan: Restoration of Monumental Cast Iron Sculpture". Robinson Iron. June 2003. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
- "Colossi of the Ancient World" – A Birmingham Historical Society Information booklet (2 pages in pdf)
- Vive Vulcan! – A Birmingham Historical Society activity book (40 pages in pdf)