There are replicas of this monument throughout the world and now, Nice, France has one too. The Quai des Etats-Unis, “Quay of the United States” which fronts the Old Town has been given a facelift and a new statue of Lady Liberty adorns the way. She’s a bit on the short side, only 1.35 metres (4 ft 5 in) but apparently she is cast from an original mould signed by Bartholdi, the sculptor who made the big one in New York. And speaking of the Grand Lady in New York, did you know that she almost found herself homeless?

Might this have been Bartholdi’s original design?

It all started in 1865 with a Frenchman called Edouard de Laboulaye. He was an idealistic political thinker who wanted to make a monument to the liberty that both France and the United States valued.
It would be a gift from the people of France to the people of the United States with no government involvement. The French would produce the statue and the Americans would provide the pedestal on which it would stand.
Laboulaye enlisted the help of a sculptor friend named Auguste Bartholdi. Together they planned and waited for the right time to start their monumental project. Ten years later (1875) the project was officially announced.
The Americans don’t want it
This noble and idealistic French plan had only one little flaw. They had not even considered the possibility that the Americans might not want to participate. But that was the case.
Bartholdi went to New York to meet with the movers and shakers of the city. When he explained that the people of France wanted to give America a giant statue to glorify the idea of liberty, that was fine with them. When he asked them to fund the pedestal that it would need to stand on, that was a different matter.

They weren’t keen on a gift that cost them money. They wanted to know how they could profit from it. Could they advertise their businesses on the base? They half-heartedly agreed to form a committee to raise funds for the pedestal but the money was slow to come in.
Meanwhile the committee in France organised concerts, opera events, and collected money from individuals all over the country. They raised the amount needed for the statue and construction began.

Bartholdi had hoped to present the completed statue at the American bicentennial celebration in 1876, but the project was behind schedule. So he decided to present the most symbolic part of the statue – the arm holding the torch. Unfortunately, the ship carrying it was a month late and the bicentennial celebration was finished by the time the arm arrived.
But the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia was still going strong, so Bartholdi packed up his giant arm and went to Philadelphia where he exhibited it and charged people 50 cents to climb up to the flame. It was a big hit and the interest of the American public was piqued by his project. Back in Paris, Bartholdi continued his publicity by displaying Lady Liberty’s head at the 1878 Paris World’s Fair.
All dressed up and nowhere to go

The pennies roll in

With the pennies of the people, the base was completed and the majestic French lady stepped up onto her pedestal. The statue that started as an idealistic French plan, and was unwanted by the Americans has become one of the most important symbols of the United States of America and today, people often forget that Lady Liberty is a French woman. It’s no wonder the immigrants coming through Ellis Island could relate to her so well, she too is an immigrant.
A few more interesting facts:
- The name given to the statue by the sculptor was La Liberté éclairant le monde, or “Liberty Enlightening the World”.
- The interior iron structure was designed by Gustave Eiffel who later built the Eiffel tower.
- At the time it was finished, the Statue of Liberty was the tallest iron structure ever built.
- The statue in New York is 46 metres (151 ft) tall. The pedestal is 47 metres (154 ft) tall.
- The statue in Nice is 1.35 metres (4 ft 5 in) tall. The pedestal is 2 metres (6 ft 6 in) tall
- The promenade which runs along the sea in front of the Old Town of Nice was named Quai des Etats-Unis “Quay of the United States” in 1917 in honour of the United States decision to enter World War I on the side of the Allies.
For more, see www.curiousrambler.com