Albert Pike Memorial (1901-2020) - Albert Pike Memorial was the only statue of a Confederate general in DC until it was torn down by protesters in June 2020. | DC Historic Sites Although he is depicted in this bronze pedestrian statue as a Masonic leader in civilian dress rather than a military man, Albert Pike was a senior officer in the Confederate Army. The Albert Pike Memorial, erected by the Supreme Council, Southern Jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, was the only public sculpture in DC to commemorate a Confederate general.
While Masons lobbied Congress for land to erect their planned monument to Pike in the 1890s, Union Army veterans in the Grand…
· archived 5/18/2026, 12:43:37 AM screenshot cached html click to expand Albert Pike Memorial (1901-2020) - Albert Pike Memorial was the only statue of a Confederate general in DC until it was torn down by protesters in June 2020. | DC Historic Sites App Store Google Play Home Sites Tours About View A Random Site Skip to main content For full functionality please enable JavaScript in your browser settings. Need Help? Sites Tours Albert Pike Memorial (1901-2020)Albert Pike Memorial was the only statue of a Confederate general in DC until it was torn down by protesters in June 2020. Text Although he is depicted in this bronze pedestrian statue as a Masonic leader in civilian dress rather than a military man, Albert Pike was a senior officer in the Confederate Army. The Albert Pike Memorial, erected by the Supreme Council, Southern Jurisdiction of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, was the only public sculpture in DC to commemorate a Confederate general. While Masons lobbied Congress for land to erect their planned monument to Pike in the 1890s, Union Army veterans in the Grand Army of the Republic organization petitioned their Congressmen to refuse the request due to Pike’s allegiance to the Confederacy. However, Congress was satisfied with the Masons’ reassurance that Pike would be depicted as a civilian rather than as a soldier. The land for the memorial was approved on April 9, 1898. Designed by Gaetano Trentanove, the statue was dedicated on October 23, 1901. The figure of Pike stood eleven feet tall upon a granite pedestal, featuring the allegorical Goddess of Masonry, who holds the banner of the Scottish Rite. The Albert Pike Memorial has a long history as a site of protest. Dating back to the efforts of Union veterans to prevent the statue from being erected at all, many have argued over the years for removal of the statue due to Pike’s racism and role in the Confederacy. In 1992, members of the LaRouche movement began a series of protests demanding the memorial be removed, citing Pike’s alleged links with the KKK. During one such event, LaRouche supporters draped Pike’s statue with a KKK pointed hat and gown. In 2017, following the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, interest spread throughout many cities and states to remove Confederate statues and memorials from public land. The day after the rally, protesters gathered at the Pike memorial and chanted “tear it down.” Local government officials, including some members of the DC City Council, Attorney General for the District of Columbia Karl Racine, and Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, asked the National Park Service to remove the memorial. In July 2019, Norton introduced a bill directing that the statue be removed. The Albert Pike Memorial was toppled and burned on Juneteenth of 2020, as protests continued across the country in response to the murder of George Floyd. Protesters used rope and chains to topple the Pike statue, doused it with a flammable liquid, and ignited it. The following day, the National Park Service removed the statue. Covered with graffiti, the pedestal remains in place. DC Inventory: March 3, 1979National Register: September 20, 1978 Media Images Albert Pike Statue : At the corner of Indiana Avenue and 3rd Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., looking west down the north side of the 300 block of D Street, N.W. ~ Source: Wikimedia Commons (United States Library of Congress, National Photo Company Collection) ~ Date: [between 1908 and 1919]Pike Statue, [Washington, D.C.] ~ Source: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA ~ Date: [between 1921 and 1922]Brigadier General Albert Pike statue in Washington, D.C. ~ Source: Wikimedia Commons ~ Creator: Cliff ~ Date: December, 2008Untitled ~ Map Skip Interactive Map +−Leaflet | OpenStreetMap | CartoDB Get Directions Constitution Avenue and 3rd Street, NW Metadata Cite this Page“Albert Pike Memorial (1901-2020),” DC Historic Sites, accessed January 15, 2024, https://historicsites.dcpreservation.org/items/show/476. TagsCivil War Monuments Demolished L’Enfant Plan Reservation Northwest Related SourcesNational Register Nomination Form“Protesters Tear, Burn Statue of Confederate General Albert Pike in Judiciary Square” Show Comments Home Sites Tours About View A Random Site App Store Google Play Email Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram © 2024 DC Preservation League Powered by Omeka + Curatescape Close menu