How well do you know your Baltimore monuments?

It's the monument season in the Monumental City. An expanded citywide Adopt-A-Monument program is under way that allows people to "adopt" bronze monuments by helping to pay for their continued maintenance. Also this spring, Mount Vernon Place is the site of "Monument to Collective Effort" -- a Maryland Institute College of Art project paying homage to the Washington Monument.

Citywide, about 160 monuments reside in grassy or worn medians, public parks, historic districts, high school and college campuses. Shrines honor everyone from African-American soldiers, Union and (more) Confederate soldiers and World War II veterans to individuals such as Billie Holiday, Frederick Douglass, Edgar Allan Poe and a rose expert named John Cook.

Earlier in April, The Sun asked readers to follow poetic clues to 10 of Baltimore's more notable public monuments. The answers are mapped out below. If you didn't get a chance to take the quiz, the clues are repeated underneath the map.

And no matter how you did, it's not too late to improve your monument IQ. Monument gazing is a great way to rediscover the Monumental City.

Happy hunting.


Here I stand...
A mystery soldier
With cannonballs at my feet
Sherlock I'm not.
I guard North Avenue
But fought South of the Border
I'm still with the fast crowd.

Who am I?
Here I stand...
Sword drawn toward
The shimmering pretend sea
My heart remains brave.
You might need Columbus to find me
Or a strong nose leading you
To creatures great and small.

Who am I?
Here I stand...
Objectified and conflicted
With my metal dual heart
While at the station
Real people with real hearts
Go north and south
As I go nowhere fast.

Who am I?
Here I stand...
A glaring golden lady
While at my shore
A boatman works the oars.
Nearby temple chimes on the hour
But not in rhyme
Or national song
What a perilous night!
A night of fiery verse
As we all found our voice.
Who am I?
Here I stand...
Towering above my country
I'm a lottery winner
Built from humble county marble
I drip with December lights
And claim
I was the First

Who am I?
Here I stand...
Once part of City Life
I'm now atop state history
Forever listening with my checkerboard face.
Unmuzzled and puzzled
Years ago I left my trademark
And have nothing left to hear or prove.

Who am I?
Here I stand...
Gated off
From Eastern rowhouses and
Fly balls.
I don't mind all the dogs
(I'm a horse man myself)
13 is my lucky number.
With the fast crowd

Who am I?
Here I stand...
Tall along a walking tour
A laurel wreath in my feminine hand
As Gina keeps her hungry eye on me.
I have seen so much old war
I see too much new war -
In important houses on either side.

Who am I?
Here I stand...
Among many muses
Oh say was I misunderstood!
And banned to this corner.
Me, alone, playing my five string
Me, the ancient rock star
With time buried at my awkward feet

Who am I?
Here I stand...
By the clock tower
And the shrine of the Perpetual Upset Stomach --
Its view now obstructed.
Me, by the larger-than-life jersey number
And my maker not knowing my right from left!
Leaving me an error.

Who am I?


Talk about it: Guess the monuments

Offer your best guesses to the clues offered on the left. Be sure to include the clue number to which you are referring to avoid confusion. A previous version of this story repeated a clue. The Sun regrets the error.

#10 - The dolphin statue/fountain outside of the aquarium?

Submitted by Jess

5:25 PM EDT, Apr 25, 2008

#9 The Watson Monument, he served in the Mexican War #10 The Wallace Monument near the Zoo on Druid Lake in Druid Hill Park.

Submitted by Martha

3:22 PM EDT, Apr 25, 2008

# 9 Watson

Submitted by EC

3:15 PM EDT, Apr 25, 2008

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