untitled design

France to send second Statue of Liberty to the United States

thirty-five years after the inauguration of the first Statue of Liberty, a new Miss Liberty will arrive on July 4 in New York, United States, for the American National Day, reports Sunday Newspaper. Sent by France, she will leave the port of Le Havre on June 7.

“This idea of ​​a new trip was born from a meeting in July 2019” with Olivier Faron, general administrator of the National Conservatory of Arts and Crafts, explains diplomat Philippe Étienne. “We wanted to reconnect with this Franco-American story. This statue is a double symbol of freedom but also of welcome. ”

France has thus decided to offer a second Statue of Liberty “to pay tribute to all those who, on both sides of the Atlantic, made it possible to build the Statue of Liberty and who fought for what it symbolizes throughout the world ”.

Installed in the garden of the French Ambassador

The second Miss Liberty, 2.83 meters high, will be temporarily hosted on Ellis Island, where the American National Museum of Immigration is located. This statue, much smaller than its big sister, will later be transported to Washington and installed in the garden of the French Ambassador. “I warned the neighbors and the mayor of Washington, it will be visible to everyone from the street,” says Philippe Étienne.

Although some see this project as a snub to Donald Trump, the ambassador disputes and qualifies this adventure as apolitical. The project is also public, although the funding remains private. The State has chosen the shipowner CMA CGM as its partner.

One of the Parisian replicas of the famous Statue of Liberty

This second statue will remain in the United States for ten years, period of the loan granted by the Conservatory to the Quai d’Orsay, then will return to France. This second Lady Liberty is one of the Parisian replicas of the famous Statue of Liberty.

The first Statue of Liberty, nearly 93 meters high, was designed by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc, designed by Gustave Eiffel and sculpted by Auguste Bartholdi. It was donated to celebrate the centenary of the United States’ Declaration of Independence, although it was not inaugurated until ten years later, in 1886.

You may also like

Get the latest

Stay Informed: Get the Latest Updates and Insights

 

Most popular