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On View
On view
Object number2008.27

Nathan Hale

Artist (American, 1863-1937)
Date1890
Mediumbronze
DimensionsOverall: 28 × 8 × 6 in. (71.1 × 20.3 × 15.2 cm)
Credit LinePurchased with funds provided by an anonymous donor
Exhibition History"The Medallic Art Collection of Bronzes," Medallic Art Company, no.59. "Lasting Legacy: A Collection for Kalamazoo," Kalamazoo Institute of Arts, Kalamazoo, Michigan (Sep. 6, 2014 - Jan. 4, 2015). "Unveiling American Genius," KIA Permanent Collection Exhibition, Traditional, Markin, Nay and Groos Galleries (March 1, 2021 - December 31, 2023).Label TextNathan Hale was a young teacher serving in the Seventh Connecticut Regiment in the Revolutionary War when General George Washington sought a soldier to serve as a spy behind enemy lines. The only volunteer for the job, Hale’s responsibility was to report on British troop movements during the Redcoats’ invasion of Manhattan Island in September 1776. Captured behind enemy lines, Hale was hanged as a traitor without a trial. Reportedly, his final words were the now-famous quote: “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.” Frederick William MacMonnies was among the leading American sculptors of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Like many of the other most esteemed U.S. artists of this era, he made his reputation while living abroad in Paris, though he often completed commissions for American clients. This is a maquette for a life-size bronze that stands in City Hall Park in New York City at what is thought to be the site of Hale’s hanging. The statue shows the patriot with his wrists and ankles bound but his neck bare in preparation for the executioner’s noose. Hale stands defiantly, evidently prepared to deliver his defiant final words. The full-size statue was completed in France, shipped across the Atlantic, and unveiled on November 25, 1893 – Evacuation Day, the annual New York City celebration of the anniversary of the departure of the British Army from the city at the end of the war.
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