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America's most visited memorials


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“I think memorials and monuments act as physical symbols of our reverence,” says Gina Gray, Director of Public Affairs at Arlington National Cemetery. In addition to the Tomb of the Unknowns, says Gray, the USS Maine Mast Memorial is one of the most heavily visited sites within Arlington. Dedicated in 1915, the memorial is built around the actual mast of the ship sunk in Havana, Cuba, in 1898 (its destruction was a catalyst for the Spanish-American War).

The Maine’s history may be unfamiliar to many of Arlington’s visitors, but Gray says it’s a good example of another role that memorials play in general—acting as a “points of reference” to the past; in the same way, she says, that the cemetery’s tomb for unknown Civil War dead, which contains the remains of 2,111 anonymous soldiers, makes a 19th-century war seem more present and real for many visitors to Arlington.

Some of the most-visited memorial sites on our list make history present in a dramatic fashion—Valley Forge (of Revolutionary War fame) and the Shiloh National Military Park (site of the bloody Civil War battle), host regular “living history” events. At Valley Forge, costumed interpreters talk about 18th-century soldier life, and at Shiloh, re-enactors depict Union and Confederate camp scenes.

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Rosenfeld explains memorials’ referential function this way: “Any time you look at an historical event from the past that is defined by suffering, bloodshed and horror—it underscores why we are grateful… it reminds us of how bad things were in the past, and breaks up the humdrum of our daily lives by telling us about a period in history when dramatic things were happening.” Unlike in Europe, he explains, “you hardly ever see signs of ruins—or signs of failure and destruction” in the American landscape. “Without those visible reminders of the destructiveness of battle,” he adds, “it’s easy to forget about the history and the true horror of war.”

Image: Fort Sumter National Monument, S.C.
National Park Service
Built after the war of 1812 to protect the Southern coast, Fort Sumter became the site of the Civil War's first battle, after South Carolina's secession. Although the war's first shot was fired on this Union-held fort, the first deaths actually occurred the day after the battle ended, during a surrender ceremony. Visitors per year: 792,933.

The Veterans of Foreign Wars’ Joe Davis comments on another function of war memorials and monuments. “War memorials—from the national level all the way down to the local—are a way of saying thank you [to soldiers] for their service, and thank you to military families who have sacrificed as well.”

Davis describes a further reason the NPS memorial sites may receive hundreds of thousands—and sometimes millions—of visitors per year. Commemorating or mourning war only in private, he says, would be missing an important part of the picture: “Monuments share the experience of war with the public,” he says. “And war is a shared experience.”

To find out which of the NPS memorial sites receive the most annual visitation, view our slide show of America’s 15 most visited national monuments and memorials.

Note: While we have tracked data exclusively for sites within the National Park Service system, there are, of course, hundreds of war memorials and monuments that do not fall under its jurisdiction. A prominent example is the National World War One Memorial and Museum, located in Kansas City, Missouri, which, according to its spokesperson, Denise Rendina, received 171,040 paying guests in 2007 and approximately 400,000 when the total includes on-site events. And National Park Service spokesperson Butch Street explains that the agency also oversees more than 100 “Related Areas,” such as the African American Civil War Memorial in Washington, D.C., which do not report visitation figures to NPS.



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