At Harvard's
Lamont Library, the Farnsworth Room is dedicated in Farnsworth's honor. The room, which is "devoted to non-curricular leisure reading, houses approximately 4,000 eclectic titles." It "is a treasure trove of bizarre finds." Originally opened in
Widener Library in 1916, and moved to Lamont upon the latter's opening in 1949, it was the first American college reading room dedicated to extracurricular reading. Alumnus
Thomas Wolfe says he learned more in the Farnsworth Room than anywhere else at Harvard. In 1920, Farnsworth's family erected a monument to him and the 130 Foreign Legionnaires from the 1st and 2nd Régiment Etrangers who died in the Battle of Champagne in
Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus. It is an
ossuary and holds the remains of the 130 Legionnaires. The stones for the monument came from the same quarry as those that form the
Arc de Triomphe. The monument, which was designed by
Alexandre Marcel, measures by , with the entrance on the north. Due to the poor
soil quality in Champagne, fertile soil from
Seine-et-Marne was trucked in to plant fir and pine trees, as well as a thick hedge. An inscription on the memorial was written by
Charles W. Eliot, and another contains the names of the men buried in it. It was dedicated on November 3, 1920, by
Joseph-Marie Tissier,
bishop of Châlons. Present at the dedication were Farnsworth's parents, sister,
Pierre-Georges Duport, and representatives of the French government.
Darius Milhaud gave a speech. It is known today as the "American Monument" by the residents of Souain. Rue Henry Farnsworth in Souain was named for Farnsworth at a ceremony in September 1965 that was attended by Ellen. ==References==