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  • Plaza memorials a portal to state's diversity

    AZ Central, AZ
    Oct 26 2006

    Plaza memorials a portal to state's diversity

    27 monuments at Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza offer lasting reminders
    of topics important to Arizonans

    Angela Cara Pancrazio
    The Arizona Republic
    Oct. 26, 2006 12:00 AM


    Most of the time, with the exception of Memorial Day and Veterans
    Day, the only regulars at Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza are state
    workers on a stroll or schoolchildren on a field trip.

    Recently, attention has focused on the Arizona 9/11 Memorial because
    of its inscriptions, which some consider disrespectful.

    But Alice Duckworth, the bespectacled tour coordinator at the Arizona
    Capitol Museum and the unofficial point person for the monuments,
    says there is much more to be seen on the 10-acre plaza between Adams
    and Jefferson streets in Phoenix. advertisement

    Ask Duckworth anything about the 27 monuments outside the state
    Capitol, and no doubt she will note some interesting tidbit like the
    one about the time capsules buried among the memorials.

    If she can't answer your question, she will go straight to what she
    calls her brain: a three-ring notebook swollen with pictures and
    stories about each monument.

    Because the 9/11 Memorial's future is uncertain, Duckworth has not
    yet added any photos or information about it to her notebook.

    On the plaza, east of the state Capitol, stand the silent reminders
    of everything from law enforcement canines that have been killed in
    the line of duty to Armenians who survived the genocide of their
    people in Turkey in the early 20th century and made their way to
    Arizona.

    It's an eclectic display, a portal into the state's diversity.


    In Arizona memory
    Spread across 10 acres, Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza is the V-shaped
    centerpiece at the state Capitol. Monuments there commemorate fallen
    peace officers and soldiers from the Civil War, World Wars I and II,
    Korean War, Vietnam War and Desert Storm. Fund-raising efforts are
    under way for a tribute to soldiers of Operation Enduring Freedom.

    The plaza's monuments also honor crime victims, pioneer women, a
    Franciscan chaplain, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Wesley
    Bolin.

    Before his brief four-month stint as governor in 1977, Bolin was
    Arizona secretary of state for 28 years. He died in March 1978. The
    plaza was dedicated in 1983.

    The plaza's monuments and memorials:

    Wesley Bolin Memorial Marker

    Father Kino Statue

    Bushmasters Memorial

    Arizona Pioneer Women Memorial

    Ten Commandments Memorial

    Civilian Conservation Corps Memorial

    4th Marine Division, World War II

    Law Enforcement Memorial

    World War I Memorial

    Confederate Troops Memorial

    Jewish War Veterans Memorial

    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial

    Armenian Martyrs Memorial

    Desert Storm Memorial

    American Merchant Seaman Memorial

    Father Braun Memorial

    Arizona Peace Officers Memorial

    Korean War Memorial

    USS Arizona mast

    USS Arizona anchor

    Vietnam Veterans Memorial

    Ernest W. McFarland Memorial

    Purple Heart Memorial

    Arizona Workers Memorial/ El Pasaje

    Arizona Crime Victims Monument

    Arizona Law Enforcement Canine Memorial

    Arizona 9/11 Memorial
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