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Darius and Girenas Memorial

Facility Details

Main Address

6743 S. Kedzie Ave.
Chicago, IL 60629
United States

Located Within:

Darius and Girenas Memorial

Additional Facility Details
Artist
Raout Josset, sculptor
Artwork Year Installed
1935
Other Designer
Koncevic & Recher, architects
Features
Artworks & Monuments, Outdoor, Sculpture
Description

This Art Deco style monument honors two Lithuanian-American pilots who died during an attempt to fly from New York to Lithuania in 1933. Captain Stephen Darius and Lieutenant Stanley Girenas had begun planning their daring trans-Atlantic adventure in the 1920s after returning from fighting for the United States against Germany in World War I. Unfortunately, their mission failed. The “Lituanica” crashed in Northern Germany, just 400 miles from their intended destination of Kaunas, Lithuania. Darius and Girenas both died on impact and the Lithuanian government gave them a state funeral.



Several months after the tragedy, the Lithuanian consul in Chicago decided to commission a monument to the two aviators. A committee selected Chicago architect Charles B. Koncevic (1909–2000) and sculptor Raoul Josset (1900–1957) to design the Art Deco-style memorial, which was funded through a popular subscription program. The sleek, modernistic, polished granite structure includes a bronze globe that outlines the flight path. The artwork also includes plaques providing information about the flight and portraits of the aviators.



A crowd of forty thousand people gathered for the dedication of the Darius and Girenas Memorial in July of 1935. The events of the day included a military parade with a drum and bugle corps, and songs performed by the choirs of eleven different churches.



In the late 1990s, the 첥Ƶ restored the artwork. Today, Marquette Park's Darius and Girenas Memorial is considered noteworthy not only for marking an important event in Lithuanian American history but as one of the few Art Deco-style memorials in Chicago.

Additional Information

North of S. California Avenue and west of W. 67th Street

Darius and Girenas Memorial

Darius and Girenas Memorial