Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Ludlow Monument

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Designer
  
Hugh Sullivan

Address
  
Trinidad, CO 81082, USA

Dedicated to
  
Ludlow Massacre

Material
  
Vermont granite

Completion date
  
1918

Ludlow Monument

Location
  
Del Aqua Canyon Rd., Ludlow, Colorado

Similar
  
Rocky Mountains, El Pueblo History Museum, Sugarite Canyon State Park, Spanish Peaks

Ludlow monument


The Ludlow Monument is a granite memorial by sculptor Hugh Sullivan erected by the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) at the Ludlow Tent Colony Site near Ludlow, Colorado in 1918 to honor the victims of the Ludlow massacre. It is located on County Road 44, about 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) west of Interstate 25 (US 85, 87 & 160), at County Road 615.

Contents

History

The monument was fabricated by the Jones Brothers Company of Barre, Vermont using local granite was commissioned by Sam Falsetto, president of the United Mine Workers of Trinidad, Colorado. The Springfield Granite Company served as the contractor.

The Monument was damaged by persons unknown in 2003 with the heads and arms of the statue figures cut and removed. The repaired monument was unveiled at the UMWA's annual Ludlow ceremony on June 5, 2005. The repairs to the monument were done by Griswold and Associates using stone from the original quarry. The carving of the new heads and arm was done by Marcel Maechler.

Nearby attractions

The Victor American Hastings Mine Disaster monument is located approximately one to two miles west of Ludlow Monument.

References

Ludlow Monument Wikipedia