A large aperture would leave the trellis open when it reaches the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.
Across from it is the Soldiers and Sailors Monument (1902).
In the past, others have voiced their opinions of the enslaved figure depicted on the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.
Until the early 1960s, Indianapolis zoning laws stated that no building could be taller than the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.
Several bronze plaques have been added to the Soldiers and Sailors Monument since its construction, memorializing members of the American armed forces.
The total cost of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument is believed to be $26,000 at the time.
Recently, we've seen "community activists" block everything from college dormitories to badly needed repairs around the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.
The Soldiers and Sailors Monument is located on a rise called Flag Staff Hill.
His body was held in state in the Great Hall of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.
Ten years later, on May 30, 1909, the cornerstone for the Soldiers and Sailors Monument was laid.