Vietnam Veterans MemorialMaya Lin designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial for a course in funerary architecture at Yale University. She got a B-plus, but she submitted the idea to the national competition then under way to pick a design for a Vietnam memorial, and beat out more than1,400 other entrants. Travel Information
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Hours: The public may visit the memorial 24 hours a day. Rangers are on duty to answer questions from 9:30 am to 11:30 pm daily. Admission: Free Parking: Limited parking is available along Ohio Drive, SW, between the Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson Memorials. Metrorail: Take the Blue or Orange Line Foggy Bottom/George Washington University, walk eight blocks south on 23rd Street, then circle east around the Lincoln Memorial. On the Red Line, Farragut North is closest, but its a bit of a hike from the station. Nearby AttractionsSuggested Tours
When the plan was unveiled, it caused a minor scandal. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is like no other war memorial built before it: there is no triumphalism or celebration of bravery in it, just a long black granite wall engraved with the seemingly endless names of the Vietnam War's dead. It was called a scar on the earth, a ditch, a slap in the face to veterans. Jim Webb, now a U.S. Senator from Virginia, called it a "nihilistic slab of stone." There were accusations that a Communist had infiltrated the competition jury, and slurs against Lin’s ethnicity. It came very close to not being built at all. Travel Tips
If you know someone who fell in Vietnam, you can locate his or her name on the wall at www.thewall-usa.com before you visit. It has become a tradition to bring blank paper and a pencil to take a rubbing of the engraved name.
Find all the information you need about Washington, D.C. at http://www.thedistrict.com |
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