The Maryland
Daughters of the Confederacy raised money for the monument privately and commissioned a sculptor from New York City,
F. Wellington Ruckstuhl to build it. The monument was dedicated on May 2, 1903. The statue shows Glory supporting a fallen soldier, his standard lowered but her wreath of History held high. The inscription at the base of the monument read, "GLORIA VICTIS", meaning "Glory to the Vanquished" On the right side it read: "
Deo vindice", on the left: "
Fatti maschii, parole femine" and on the rear
Glory Stands Beside Our Grief. Erected by the Maryland Daughters of the Confederacy, February 1903. The monument was marked in June 2015, with "
Black Lives Matter" scrawled across its side in the aftermath of the
Charleston church shooting. In August 2017, its statue was covered with red paint. It was removed during the same month along with all other
Confederate monuments in the city after the
Baltimore City Council unanimously voted on August 14, 2017, to have it removed along with the
Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee Monument, the
Roger B. Taney Sculpture, and the
Confederate Women's Monument. ==See also==