Battle Monument in Baltimore is the first public war memorial

September 12, 1822

On the 8th Anniversary of the Battle of Baltimore (Defenders Day), the statue of Lady Baltimore is hoisted to the top of the new Battle Monument, the first stone monument and first public war memorial.

This monument, built between 1815 and 1825, is created to commemorate the Baltimore victory over the British when they invaded in 1814. Designed by French émigré Maximilian Godefroy (1765-ca1838), the monument still proudly stands in a square between Baltimore courthouses just a few blocks from the Inner Harbor.

After almost two centuries atop the monument, the Lady Baltimore statue is deteriorating from the weather and pollution. She is moved to the Maryland Center for History and Culture prior to the Bicentennial of the Battle of Baltimore.

For More Information

Baltimore City Historical and Architectural Preservation (CHAP)

Maryland Center for History and Culture

View Other Mosaic Pieces

Ice Cream industry begins

Dairyman and abolitionist Jacob Fussell invents the ice cream industry in 1851 in Baltimore. Looking for ways to use the extra cream in his dairy business, he sells ice cream to Baltimore. Fussell’s original ice cream wagon is in the Baltimore Museum of Industry.

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Land Recognition

We acknowledge the enduring presence of many American Indian tribes who once lived in Maryland and who now, having lost their lands, live in a diaspora. Read more.

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