ROSA PARKS IS 1ST BLACK WOMAN TO HAVE A STATUE ON CAPITOL HILL
Rosa Parks, the civil rights leader, will become the first
African-American woman to have her likeness depicted in the Capitol’s
Statuary Hall when a statue of her is installed later this year, Senator
Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, said in an interview
Thursday.
Statuary Hall is ordinarily reserved for full-size statues from the states; each state sends two statues of its choosing to be put on display. The likeness of Ms. Parks was authorized by a special act of Congress in 2005; it represents the first commission by Congress for a full-size statue since the 1870s, according to the National Endowment for the Arts, which oversaw the design competition for the statue.
Statuary Hall is ordinarily reserved for full-size statues from the states; each state sends two statues of its choosing to be put on display. The likeness of Ms. Parks was authorized by a special act of Congress in 2005; it represents the first commission by Congress for a full-size statue since the 1870s, according to the National Endowment for the Arts, which oversaw the design competition for the statue.
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