The First Division Monument sits on a plaza in President's Park, west of the White House and south of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building (EEOB) at the corner of 17th Street and State Place, NW. (The EEOB was originally known as the State, War, and Navy Building and then as the Old Executive Office Building.) The monument was conceived by the Society of the First Division, the veterans' organization of the U.S. Army's First Division (later renamed the
1st Infantry Division), to honor the valiant efforts of the soldiers who fought in World War I. It was dedicated October 4, 1924 and is inscribed with the names of 5,516 fallen servicemen. The monument was built using
Milford pink granite. Later additions to the monument commemorate the lives of 1st Infantry Division soldiers who died in subsequent wars. The World War II addition on the west side was dedicated in 1957 (4,325 names), the Vietnam War addition on the east side in 1977 (3,079 names), and the Desert Storm plaque in 1995 (27 names). The #1 red annuals flowerbed (bed length 181 ft) in front of the monument was added as part of First Lady
Lady Bird Johnson’s beautification plans in 1965. Congressional approval was obtained to erect the First Division Monument and its later additions on federal ground. ==Adding names of the fallen from recent conflicts==