The
Sidney Lanier Cottage in
Macon, Georgia, is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. The square stone
Four Southern Poets Monument, located between 7th and 8th Streets in Augusta, lists Lanier as one of Georgia's four great poets, all of whom were in the Confederate military. The southeastern side bears this inscription: "To Sidney Lanier 1842–1880. The Catholic man who hath mightily won God out of knowledge and good out of infinite pain and sight out of blindness and purity out of a stain." The other poets on the monument are
James Ryder Randall, Fr.
Abram Ryan, and
Paul Hayne. Baltimore honored Lanier with a large and elaborate bronze and granite sculptural monument, created by
Hans K. Schuler and located on the campus of the
Johns Hopkins University. In addition to the monument at Johns Hopkins, Lanier was also later memorialized on the campus of
Duke University in
Durham, North Carolina. Upon the construction of the iconic
Duke Chapel between 1930 and 1935 on the university's West Campus, a statue of Lanier was included alongside two fellow prominent Southerners,
Thomas Jefferson and
Robert E. Lee. This statue, which appears to show a Lanier older than the 39 years he actually lived, is situated on the right side of the portico leading into the chapel narthex. It is prominently featured on the cover of the 2010 autobiographical memoir ''Hannah's Child'', by
Stanley Hauerwas, a Methodist theologian teaching at
Duke Divinity School.
The United Daughters of the Confederacy worked successfully to enhance Lanier's legacy. Lanier's poem "The Marshes of Glynn" is the inspiration for a
cantata by the same name that was created by the modern English composer
Andrew Downes to celebrate the Royal Opening of the
Adrian Boult Hall in Birmingham, England, in 1986.
Piers Anthony used Lanier, his life, and his poetry in his science-fiction novel
Macroscope (1969). He quotes from "The Marshes of Glynn" and other references appear throughout the novel. In 1980, Yugoslav rock band
Lutajuća Srca recorded the song "Večernja pesma", featuring lyrics from Lanier's "An Evening Poem" in
Serbo-Croatian, the song becoming a minor hit for the band. Several entities have been named for Sidney Lanier. Among them are:
Inhabited places •
Lanier County, Georgia • Sidney Lanier Avenue, residential street, Athens, Georgia • Sidney Lanier Lane, residential street, Greenwich, Connecticut • Lanier Avenue, Fayetteville, Georgia • Lanier Street, residential street, Decatur, Alabama •
Lanier Heights, neighborhood, Washington, D.C. • (Indirectly) , which was named for the county.
Bodies of water •
Lake Lanier, operated by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers northeast of
Atlanta, Georgia • Lake Lanier in
Landrum, South Carolina.
Schools •
Sidney Lanier High School in
Montgomery, Alabama (The Montgomery County Board of Education voted to close the school in 2024) • Sidney Lanier School in
Gainesville, Florida •
Lanier University, short-lived university; first Baptist, then owned by the
Ku Klux Klan for a year, in
Atlanta, Georgia •
The Sidney Lanier Building (previously Sidney Lanier Elementary School) on the campus of
Glynn Academy, in Brunswick, Georgia •
Lanier Middle School in Sugar Hill, Georgia •
Lanier High School in Sugar Hill, Georgia • Lanier Elementary School in
Gainesville, Georgia • Sidney Lanier Elementary School in
Tulsa, Oklahoma •
Sidney Lanier High School in Austin, Texas. Renamed to Juan Navarro High School Feb, 2019 • Sidney Lanier Expressive Arts Vanguard Elementary School in
Dallas, Texas •
Lanier Middle School in Houston, Texas (Now Bob Lanier Middle School after 90 years as Sidney Lanier Middle School) •
Lanier High School in San Antonio, Texas • Sidney Lanier Elementary School in Tampa, Florida •
Lanier Technical College in Gainesville, Georgia •
Katherine Johnson Middle School in Fairfax, Virginia was named Sidney Lanier Middle School for 60 years before being renamed for Johnson in 2021. • Lanier Elementary school in Blount County, Tennessee
Other and was inspired to write the poem "
The Marshes of Glynn". •
Sidney Lanier Cottage, the birthplace of Lanier, in Macon, Georgia •
Sidney Lanier Bridge over the South Brunswick River in
Brunswick, Georgia •
Sidney Lanier Monument, a monument in
Piedmont Park in Atlanta •
Lanier's Oak in Brunswick, Georgia •
The Lanier Library, Tryon, North Carolina. Lanier's widow, Mary, donated two of his volumes of poetry to begin the collection when the library was established in 1890. • Sidney Lanier Camp, Eliot, Maine. •
Sidney Lanier Boulevard in Duluth, GA • The Sidney Lanier Suite at The Harwood Cottage at Historic Macon, GA • The
World War II Liberty Ship was named in his honor. • A 1972 US eight-cent postage stamp: "Sidney Lanier - American poet" • Sidney Lanier Memorial Scholarship at the
University of California, Los Angeles • Lanier Island, in the
Mackay River in Glynn County, Georgia. ==References==