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{{Infobox artwork
| image_file = Amiable Child Monument.jpg
| image_size = 200px
| title = Amiable Child Monument
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}}
The '''''Amiable Child Monument''''' is a monument located in New York City's [[Riverside Park (Manhattan)|Riverside Park]]. It stands west of the southbound lanes of [[Riverside Drive (Manhattan)|Riverside Drive]] north of 122nd Street in [[Morningside Heights, Manhattan]].<ref name="appel">{{cite journal| last=Appel| first=Jacob M.| date=Fall 2009| title=Mourning in Morningside: Mysteries of Manhattan Island's Amiable Child| journal=Palo Alto Review| pages=38–39}}</ref>
It is a monument to a small boy who died in what was then an area of country homes near New York City. One side of the monument reads: “Erected to the Memory of an Amiable Child, St. Claire Pollock, Died 15 July 1797 in the Fifth Year of His Age.”<ref name="rpf">{{cite web|url=http://www.riversideparkfund.org/visit/amiable-child-monument |title=Amiable Child Monument |publisher=Riverside Park Fund |
During [[Morningside Heights, Manhattan|Morningside Heights]]’s Golden Age, when the nearby Claremont Inn served luminaries that included [[George M. Cohan]], [[Cole Porter]], [[Lillian Russell]] and Mayor [[Jimmy Walker]], the site inspired pilgrimages and poetry. Of the many verses written about the memorial is Herman George Scheffauer’s “An Amiable Child,” which describes the grave as being “like a song of peace in iron frays.”<ref name="appel"/> An identically named poem by Anna Markham, wife of proletarian author and critic [[Edwin Markham]], opens with the lines that defined the monument for her contemporaries: “At Riverside, on the slow hill-slant / Two memoried graves are seen / A granite dome is over Grant / and over a child the green.”<ref name="appel"/> The monument is also the inspiration for [[Irene Marcuse]]'s novel ''Death of an Amiable Child''.
By one late nineteenth-century account, as related by Donald Reynolds, an attempt to relocate the grave in order to clear space for General Grant’s tomb, which was quickly abandoned by the city after a groundswell of public opposition, transformed the “tribute to the gentleness that underlies the apparent brutality of the great city” into “almost a national institution”.<ref name="appel"/>▼
▲By one late nineteenth-century account, as related by Donald Reynolds, an attempt to relocate the grave in order to clear space for General
[[File:Monumental inscription of the Amiable Child Monument.jpg|alt=Monumental inscription carved into stone on monument.|thumb|Monumental inscription carved into stone on one side of the Amiable Child Monument, reading: "Erected to the Memory of an Amiable Child, St. Claire Pollock, Died 15 July 1797 in the Fifth Year of His Age."]]
The monument is thought to be the only single-person private grave on city-owned land in New York City.<ref name=rpf/>
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==External links==
*[[File:Monumental inscription on back side of the Amiable Child Monument.jpg|alt=Monumental inscription carved into stone on monument.|thumb|Monumental inscription carved on back side of the Amiable Child Monument, reading: "'Man that is born of woman is of few days and full of trouble. He cometh like a flower and is cut down; he fleeth also as a shadow and continueth not.' Job 14:1–2."]][http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-tomb-of-amiable-child-riverside-park.html Daytonian in Manhattan blog]
{{Public art in Manhattan}}
[[Category:1967 sculptures]]
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[[Category:Outdoor sculptures in Manhattan]]
[[Category:Riverside Park (Manhattan)]]
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