This guy is cool.
国殇日趁天气好,拍张 SEVENTH REGIMENT NEW YORK 群雕的照片, 拍的时候没有注意,回家仔细一看,边上有个童车,放大照片一看, 哦,这个小青年还真是COOL。
这个小青年才是美国的未来, 手持垃圾食品,一把年纪居然还坐在童车里面,满脸很牛皮哄哄的神情。
The
107th Infantry Memorial is dedicated to the men who served in the 107th New York Infantry Regiment, originally
Seventh Regiment of New York, during World War I. The regiment was, as its name implies, stationed in New York, and consisted of males mainly from this region. In 1917, the
National Guard's 7th New York Infantry Registry Division. While in France, they saw heavy action, and at the end of the war in November 1918, of the 3,700 men originally in the regiment, 580 men were killed and 1,487 wounded, with four of the regiment's soldiers being awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor. The memorial depicts seven men; the one to the far right carrying two
Mills bombs, while supporting the wounded soldier next to him. To his right another infantryman (depicting Robert Russell Bennett, a 107 combat veteran who was asked by the artist to model for the statue along with 6 other actual 107 veterans of the Somme) rushes towards the enemy positions, while the helmet less squad leader and another soldier are approaching the enemy with bayonets fixed. To the far left, one soldier is holding a mortally wounded soldier, keeping him on his feet. The
bronze memorial was donated by 7th-107th Memorial Committee, and was designed and sculpted by
Karl Illava, who served in the 107th IR as a sergeant in World War I. The monument was first conceived about 1920, was made in 1926–1927 and was placed in the park and unveiled in 1927, near the perimeter wall at
Fifth Avenue and 67th Street.