05/23/2026
On April 27, 1897, President William McKinley spoke at the dedication of Ulysses S. Grant’s Tomb in Riverside Park in New York City. He proclaimed, “A great life, dedicated to the welfare of the nation, here finds its earthly coronation. . . Architecture has paid high tribute to the leaders of mankind, but never was a memorial more worthily bestowed or more gratefully accepted by a free people than the beautiful structure before which we are gathered.”
While Grant’s Tomb is one among the pantheon of presidential graves, it is unique. Designed in 1890 by John Hemenway Duncan for a location that was sparsely settled and barren of buildings, he envisioned “a monumental tomb, no matter from what point of view it may be seen.” Built in the neoclassical style favored in the Gilded Age, its white granite and Doric columns harkened back to the ancient Greeks and Romans.
Located in America’s most diverse city, it attracts an equally diverse range of visitors. In a nation once again divided, Grant’s Tomb remains an ideal place to renew the American motto, “E Pluribus Unum.”
Learn more about the history and legacy of Grant’s Tomb in the latest issue of “Panorama,” VSNY’s quarterly newsletter: https://buff.ly/EpuTHiV
(Text adapted from Louis L. Picone’s “Grant’s Tomb and National Reconciliation” in “Panorama, Winter 2026”)
Photos:
1) Interior view of the coffered dome central to the design of President Grant’s Tomb. Credit: Bruce M. White for the White House Historical Association
2) Exterior view, The General Grant National Memorial at Riverside Drive and West 122nd Street in New York City. Credit: Bruce M. White for the White House Historical Association
3) Interior view of the caskets of President Ulysses S. Grant and his wife Julia Dent Grant, The General Grant National Memorial. Credit: Bruce M. White for the White House Historical Association
4) Mural by artist Allyn Cox depicting Union General Ulysses S. Grant accepting Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s surrender beneath an American eagle bearing a banner embellished “E Pluribus Unum, Let Us Have Peace.” Credit: Bruce M. White for the White House Historical Association