© 2024 WYSO
Our Community. Our Nation. Our World.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

New Downtown Dayton Monument Honors Public Servants

Former Dayton City Manager, Tim Riordan (left) and Artist Jon Barlow Hudson
Jerry Kenney

There is a new, and perhaps unusual, monument in downtown Dayton. The massive stone sculpture pays tribute to the legacy of public servants living and dead.

 

The 12,000-pound, rectangular sculpture stands at the corner of 2nd St. and St. Clair in the city's Cooper Park.   

Inscribed around the top of the monument are 13 quotes highlighting the value of public service from notable figures in American history,including John F. Kennedy, Thomas Jefferson and Muhammad Ali.

Former city manager Tim Riordan says his desire to have the monument built began several years ago.

“I knew from my work how passionate public servants were about what they did, and how they wanted to do a good job," he says. "And I wanted to do something that made a statement, that said, ‘hey, thanks.”

 
The monument is called “The Common Good.” Riordan says it was carved from a single piece of Pennsylvania granite weighing more than six tons.

 

Along with the inspirational quotes, the sculpture is also designed to be interactive.

Credit Jerry Kenney

Seats on either side on the monument face away from each other but an opening through the middle of the granite allows for communication.

 

The monument’s creator, world-renowned artist, Jon Barlow Hudson, says the design represents how two people with differing opinions can can come together.

 

“The stone I’ve had for 20, 25 years," he says. "I just hadn’t found the right project, and so this is just a happy meeting of mutual benefit.”

Hudson has created outdoor sculptures in more than 20 countries and 10 U.S. states.

 

Jerry began volunteering at WYSO in 1991 and hosting Sunday night's Alpha Rhythms in 1992. He joined the YSO staff in 2007 as Morning Edition Host, then All Things Considered. He's hosted Sunday morning's WYSO Weekend since 2008 and produced several radio dramas and specials . In 2009 Jerry received the Best Feature award from Public Radio News Directors Inc., and was named the 2023 winner of the Ohio Associated Press Media Editors Best Anchor/News Host award. His current, heart-felt projects include the occasional series Bulletin Board Diaries, which focuses on local, old-school advertisers and small business owners. He has also returned as the co-host Alpha Rhythms.