If we are going to make real change, let’s do the work with our impacted communities to make that change. To do that, I have asked the Arts Commission, the Human Rights Commission, and the Recreation and Parks Department and its Commission to work with the community to evaluate our public art and its intersection with our country’s racist history so that we can move forward together to make real changes in this City. Who and what we honor through our public art can and should reflect our values.”
To
Francis Scott Key
Author of the National Song
The Star-Spangled Banner
This Monument is Erected
by
James Lick
Of San Francisco California
A.D. 1887
*
This monument to Francis Scott Key was commissioned by San Francisco businessman James Lick, who donated $60,000 for the sculpture. Francis Scott Key wrote the Star-Spangled Banner after witnessing the shelling of Fort McHenry on September 13, 1814. James Lick was also in Baltimore during the shelling, which is most likely the reason for the bequest.
The travertine monument was executed by sculptor William W. Story in Rome in 1885–87. Recently renovated at a cost of $140,000, the monument is located on the music concourse in Golden Gate Park.
William Wetmore Story studied law at Harvard in 1840. Abandoning the law, he devoted himself to sculpture, and after 1850 lived in Rome where he was intimate with the Brownings and English poet and writer, Walter Savage Landor. His works include a statue of Dahlia as a young woman which is in the collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
UPDATE: June 20, 2020
This statue was vandalized by protestors. The fate of the statue is unknown and this post will be updated when more is learned.
Notification San Francisco Mayor London Breed:
I thought that it was a young Abe Lincoln at first!
Wow, what an impressive statue/monument!