US Memorial Design for Pukeahu National War Park Unveiled
US Memorial Design for Pukeahu National War Park Unveiled
Unveiling the design for the
US memorial and the mauri stones ceremony cements the
long-standing relationship between the United States and New
Zealand, in times of peace and conflict, Paul James CE
Manatū Taonga Ministry for Culture and Heritage said
today.
“Pukeahu is a place where New Zealanders reflect on this country’s experience of conflict and how this has shaped our national identity,” he said.
“Through almost all the overseas conflicts New Zealand has been involved in, the US has also been there. It’s most appropriate the US was one of the first nations to be invited to build a memorial at the Park.
“The US memorial will be a constant reminder of this shared heritage and common interest,” Paul James said.
United States Ambassador to New Zealand His Excellency Scott Brown said the bedrock foundation of the US and New Zealand relationship was forged during World War II when more than 150,000 American servicemen and women came to New Zealand.
“They were asked to come and defend Aotearoa from invasion while most of the New Zealand military were in Europe.
“It was here they prepared for battles in the South Pacific, and here they returned for medical care. New Zealand families welcomed them into their homes and even today I meet people who speak fondly of these US service men and women.
“This memorial will preserve our shared history, our shared values, and our shared commitment to making our world a better place, providing an important place for Americans and Kiwis to visit and reflect for many generations to come,” Scott Brown said.
Designed by architect Monica Ponce de Leon the US memorial will be the fifth to take its place at Pukeahu National War Memorial Park, accompanying those from Australia, Turkey, Belgium and the United Kingdom.
The memorial design will be jointly unveiled by the US Ambassador His Excellency Scott Brown and Admiral Harry Harris United States Pacific Command, who is currently visiting New Zealand. Prior to the unveiling, the stones imbued with the mauri or life force of the memorial were buried at the site.
Opened in 2015
Pukeahu National War Memorial Park is Government’s key
legacy project to mark the First World War centenary.
Background Information
Monica Ponce
de Leon is a Venezuelan-American architect, and Dean of the
Princeton University School of Architecture. She has been
supported in Wellington by architect Sam Kebbell.
The design was commissioned by the US Government and the American Battle Monuments Commission. Since 1923 the Commission has worked to fulfil its charter, to commemorate the service, achievements and sacrifice of America’s armed forces who have served overseas.
The memorial is placed to draw people into an area of reflection. The entry pathways give way to a spiralling slope that will guide visitors around a gentle mound until, at the far end of the path, there is a tablet with a passage to help them focus on remembrance.
The words on the tablet are taken from a radio address delivered on Anzac Day 1943, by then US Secretary of the Navy, Frank Knox, and read:
Together, in our strength, we shall keep that ocean – Pacific!...As we are comrades in battle, so we shall be partners in victory. I salute the lands of the ANZACs as our companions in the peace that will follow, comrades and partners as an example to all the world of what can be accomplished by a fraternity of free men.
The
memorial’s granite tablet is currently being carved in
Madison, Wisconsin, and is expected to arrive in New Zealand
in May.
ends