 
Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Maya Ying Lin, a native of Athens, Ohio, designed
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D.C. Sometimes called "The Wall,"
the famous tribute lists the names of more than 58,235 men and women who died in
the nation's least-popular war. Its goal
was to honor the 2.7 million veterans who served in the war, while separating
the issue of their sacrifices from the U.S. policy in the war. One of the most
popular tourist attractions in the nation’s capitol, it attracts more than 4.5
million visitors each year.
Ling was an undergraduate architecture student
at Yale University in 1959, when a nonprofit group called the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial Fund, Inc. (VVMF) announced a nationwide competition to design a
memorial. She entered the contest, along with 1,420 other individuals. A jury of
eight internationally recognized artists and designers judged the entries, and
picked Ling’s design as the winner. She also served as a consultant during
construction of the Memorial.
What was Ling’s
vision?
"I saw the Vietnam Veterans Memorial not as an object placed into the earth but
as a cut in the earth that has then been polished, like a geode," she recalled.
"Interest in the land and concern about how we are polluting the air and water
of the planet are what make me want to travel back in geologic time to witness
the shaping of the earth before man."
She wanted to create a quiet, protected place
within Constitution Gardens, the area bordering Constitution Avenue in downtown
Washington that would be the memorial's site – a park within a park. The
dedication, which took place on November 13, 1982 during a four-day salute to Vietnam
veterans, revealed a simple yet stunning panorama:
polished black granite walls
with a mirror-like surface stretch into the distance toward the Washington
Monument to the east and the Lincoln Memorial to the west. As visitors draw
nearer, what appear to be white lines on the wall surface come into focus as
words, and then the words become names – thousands upon thousands almost without
end.
Families and friends of those listed on the
memorial often make rubbings of the names on the wall. They find a
specific name by consulting index books available at each end of the wall.
Ling’s name appears on a panel on the memorial, along with those of the officers
of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, architects, and others who helped make it
a reality.

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