List of equestrian statues in the United States

This is a list of equestrian statues in the United States.

Alaska

 * Girdwood
 * Mountain Man, by Frederic Remington, Alyeska Resort cast 1907(?)

Arizona

 * Phoenix
 * Lariat Cowboy (1926 ) unveiled in Phoenix, April 21, 1954.
 * Eusebio Francisco Kino, by Julian Martinez, Wesley Bolin Memorial Plaza, 1967.
 * Prescott
 * Bucky O'Neill Monument, by Solon Borglum, Yavapai County Courthouse Plaza, 1907.
 * Cowboy at Rest, by Skurja Art Casting, Yavapai County Courthouse Plaza, 1990. A copy after Solon Borglum's 1904 statue (destroyed).


 * Tucson
 * Pancho Villa, by Julian Martinez, Viente de Agosto Park, 1981.
 * Eusebio Francisco Kino, S.J., by Julian Martinez, Kino Boulevard, 1987–89.

Arkansas

 * Ash Flat
 * Bronco Buster, by Frederic Remington, Remington Plaza Shopping Center, 1895, this cast ca. 2001.
 * Coming Through the Rye, by Frederic Remington (smaller version), Remington Plaza Shopping Center, 1902, this cast ca. 2001.
 * The Rattlesnake, by Frederic Remington, Remington Plaza Shopping Center, 1909, this cast ca. 2001.
 * Hot Springs
 * American Pharoah (of the 2015 Triple Crown-winning horse and jockey Victor Espinoza), by James Peniston, Oaklawn Park Race Track, 2017.
 * Horse and Rider Group, by Barvo Walker, Oaklawn Park Race Track, 1985–86.
 * Horse and Rider, by Jan Woods, Oaklawn Park Race Track, 1991.
 * Rockamundo (Racehorse and jockey), by Alan Gipson, Oaklawn Park Race Track, 1989–90.
 * Jonesboro
 * Bronco Buster, by Frederic Remington, Indian Mall, 1895.Jonesboro AR cowboy statue 2.JPG
 * The Cheyenne, by Frederic Remington (smaller version), Caraway Plaza Shopping Center, 1901.
 * End of the Trail, by James Earle Fraser (smaller version), Caraway Plaza Shopping Center, 1894.
 * Mountain Man, by Frederic Remington, Bernard Court Shopping Center, 1903.
 * North Little Rock
 * Pioneering is Eternal, by Jack Bryant Jr., Ben E. Keith Foods, 2006.
 * Ozark
 * Bas-relief plaque of Dispatch Rider, by Joseph B. Bond, Sam Dale Monument, Dale County Lake, 1976.
 * Springdale
 * Bas-relief of Birdman, by Jack D. Woods, Tyson Foods Corporate Headquarters, 1987.

California

 * Antioch
 * Spirit Rider of the Season, by David Govedare, Wildhorse Road, 1993. Steel silhouettes of four horses, one rider.
 * Beverly Hills
 * John Wayne, by Harry Jackson, Great Western Bank, 1984.
 * Inglewood
 * Swaps (Racehorse & Jockey), by Albert Stewart, Hollywood Park Racetrack, 1955.
 * Los Angeles
 * Emiliano Zapata, by Ignacio Asunsolo, Lincoln Park (Los Angeles), 1908.
 * Angel of the Citadel, by Marino Marini, J. Paul Getty Museum, 1948, this cast 1950.
 * Bas-relief of the Mormon Battalion, by Albert Stewart, Fort Moore Pioneer Memorial, 1954–57
 * Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon, by Julian Martinez, Lincoln Park (Los Angeles), 1981.


 * Santa Barbara
 * California Cowboy, by Duke Sedgwick, Earl Warren Showgrounds, 1967.
 * Visalia
 * End of the Trail, by James Earle Fraser, Mooney's Grove Park, 1915, this cast 1971.

Colorado

 * Colorado Springs
 * William Jackson Palmer, by Nathan Potter, General William J. Palmer High School, 1929.
 * Blota Hunka (Warrior of the Plains), by Don and Charles Green, Colorado Springs Airport, 1980–81.
 * The Champ (Casey Tibbs), by Edd Hayes, ProRodeo Hall of Fame, 1989.

Connecticut

 * Bethel
 * Young Abe Lincoln, by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Bethel Public Library, 1961.
 * Bridgeport
 * The Torch Bearers, by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Discovery Museum and Planetarium, ca. 1963.


 * Redding
 * General Israel Putnam, by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Putnam Memorial State Park, 1967.

Delaware

 * Wilmington
 * Caesar Rodney, by James Edward Kelly, Rodney Square, 1922–23.

District of Columbia

 * Andrew Jackson, by Clark Mills, Lafayette Square, 1852. The oldest equestrian statue in Washington, DC.
 * Lieutenant General George Washington, by Clark Mills, Washington Circle, 1860.
 * Brevet Lt. General Winfield Scott, by Henry Kirke Brown, Scott Circle, 1874.
 * General James B. McPherson, by Louis Rebisso, McPherson Square, 1876.
 * General Nathanael Greene, by Henry Kirke Brown, Stanton Square, 1877.
 * Major General George Henry Thomas, by John Quincy Adams Ward, Thomas Circle, 1878–79.
 * Major General John A. Logan, by Franklin Simmons, Logan Circle, 1893.
 * General Winfield Scott Hancock by Henry Jackson Ellicott, 1896
 * General William Tesumseh Sherman, by Carl Rohl-Smith, General William Tecumseh Sherman Monument, President's Park, 1898–1903.
 * Ulysses S. Grant Memorial, west side of the U.S. Capitol, 1902–22:
 * Ulysses S. Grant, by Henry Merwin Shrady.
 * Cavalry Charge, by Henry Merwin Shrady.
 * Artillery, by Henry Merwin Shrady.
 * Major General George B. McClellan, by Frederick William MacMonnies, Connecticut Avenue, 1907.
 * Equestrian statue of Philip Sheridan, by Gutzon Borglum, Sheridan Circle, 1908.
 * Brigadier General Count Casimir Pulaski, by Kazimierz Chodziński, Freedom Plaza, 1910.
 * General Simón Bolívar, by Emile Antoine Bourdelle, Courtyard of the Organization of American States Building, 1914, this cast 1984.
 * Reverend Francis Asbury, by Augustus Lukeman, 16th & Mount Pleasant Streets NW, 1921.
 * Joan of Arc, by Paul DuBois, Meridian Hill Park, 1922.
 * General Jose de San Martin Memorial, by Augustin-Alexandre Dumont, Foggy Bottom, 1924.
 * The Arts of War: Sacrifice, by Leo Friedlander, Arlington Memorial Bridge, 1929–51.
 * The Arts of War: Valor, by Leo Friedlander, Arlington Memorial Bridge, 1929–51.
 * Reverend John Wesley, by Arthur George Walker, Wesley Theological Seminary, 1932, this cast 1961.
 * General George Washington, by Herbert Haseltine, Washington National Cathedral grounds, 1959. Washington is seated astride Haseltine's 1934 statue of the racehorse Man o' War.
 * General Simón Bolívar, by Felix de Weldon, 18th Street at Virginia Avenue, 1959.
 * General Bernardo de Gálvez, by Juan de Ávalos, near the State Department, 1976.
 * Colonel Michael Kovats de Fabriczy, by Paul Takacs, Embassy of the Republic of Hungary, 2003.

Florida

 * Jacksonville
 * General Andrew Jackson Reviewing the Troops, by Bob Springer, Jacksonville Landing, 1987. A copy after Clark Mills's 1853 statue in Washington, DC.

Georgia

 * Atlanta
 * General John Brown Gordon, by Solon Borglum, Georgia State Capitol, 1907.

Idaho

 * Kellogg
 * St. George and the Dragon, by David Ray Dose, Hill Street, 1988.
 * Lewiston
 * Indian Summer 1974, by Don D. Joslyn, Nez Perce County Courthouse, 1974.

Illinois

 * Chicago
 * General Ulysses S. Grant, by Louis Rebisso, Lincoln Park, 1891.
 * Signal of Peace, by Cyrus Dallin, Lincoln Park, 1894.
 * General John A. Logan, by Augustus Saint-Gaudens (Logan) and Alexander Phimister Proctor (horse), Grant Park (Chicago), 1897.
 * Thaddeus Kosciuszko, by Kasmir Chodzinski, Burnham Park (Chicago), 1904.
 * George Washington Memorial, by Daniel Chester French (Washington) and Edward Clark Potter (horse), Washington Park, 1900, this cast 1903. A replica of French & Potter's statue at the Place d'Iéna in Paris, France.
 * Fountain of Time, by Lorado Taft, Washington Park (Chicago park), 1920–22.
 * General Philip Sheridan, by Gutzon Borglum, Lake Shore Drive at Belmont Avenue, 1923.
 * The Pioneers, by James Earle Fraser, northwest pylon, Michigan Avenue Bridge, 1928.
 * The Bowman and the Spearman, two statues by Ivan Meštrović, Congress Plaza, 1928.
 * Thomas Masaryk Memorial, by Albin Polasek, Hyde Park, Chicago, 1941.

Indiana

 * Fort Wayne
 * Anthony Wayne Monument, by George Etienne Ganiere, Friedman Square, 1918.


 * Muncie
 * Appeal to the Great Spirit (smaller version), by Cyrus Edwin Dallin, Walnut & Granville Streets, ca. 1922.

Iowa

 * Burlington
 * General John Murray Corse, by Carl Rohl-Smith, Crapo Park, 1896.
 * Des Moines
 * Iowa Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument, by Carl Rohl-Smith, Iowa State Capitol, 1890–96. Four equestrian statues:
 * General Marcellus M. Crocker
 * General John M. Corse
 * General Grenville M. Dodge
 * General Samuel R. Curtis


 * Keokuk
 * Samuel Ryan Curtis Memorial, unknown artist, Victory Park, 1898.

Kansas

 * Fort Leavenworth
 * Buffalo Soldier Monument, by Eddie Dixon, 1991–92.


 * Maryville
 * Pony Express Rider, by Richard Bergen, 1985

Kentucky

 * Lexington
 * John Hunt Morgan Memorial, by Pompeo Coppini, (former) Fayette County Courthouse, 1909–11.


 * Richmond
 * Equestrian ("Mounted Policeman"), by Felix de Weldon, Eastern Kentucky University College of Law Enforcement, 1975–76.

Louisiana

 * New Orleans
 * Andrew Jackson, by Clark Mills, Jackson Square, 1856.
 * Army of Tennessee – Louisiana Division (Albert Sidney Johnston), by Alexander Doyle, Metairie Cemetery, 1877.
 * P.G.T. Beauregard Monument, by Alexander Doyle, City Park (New Orleans), 1915.
 * Bernardo de Galvez, by Juan de Ávalos, International Trade Mart, 1976–77. A replica of de Ávalos's statue in Washington, DC.

Maryland

 * Baltimore
 * John Eager Howard Monument, by Emmanuel Frémiet, Mount Vernon Place, 1904.
 * Lafayette Monument, by Andrew O'Connor, Mount Vernon Place, 1924.
 * Lee-Jackson Monument, by Laura Gardin Fraser, Wyman Park, 1935–48.
 * Pulaski Monument, by Hans Schuler, Patterson Park, 1942–51.


 * Keedysville
 * Robert E. Lee Monument, by Ron Moore, the newest monument on the Antietam Battlefield, erected June 24, 2003.

Massachusetts

 * Boston
 * George Washington, by Thomas Ball, Public Garden (Boston), 1869
 * Robert Gould Shaw Memorial, by Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Boston Common, 1884
 * General Joseph Hooker, by Daniel Chester French (Hooker) and Edward Clark Potter (horse), Massachusetts Statehouse, 1903
 * Appeal to the Great Spirit, by Cyrus Dallin, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1908
 * Paul Revere, by Cyrus Dallin, Paul Revere Plaza, North End, Boston, 1940.

Michigan

 * Detroit
 * Thaddeus Kosciuszko, by Victor Zin, Michigan-Third Street Park, 1978. A copy after Leonard Marconi's 1904 statue in Kraków, Poland.
 * Major General Alpheus Starkey Williams, by Henry Merwin Shrady, Belle Isle Park, 1921.


 * Midland
 * Abraham Lincoln Equestrian Monument (Young Abe Lincoln), by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Northwood Institute, Midland, 1961, this casting 1963.

George Armstrong Custer-Monroe.

Abraham Lincoln, Adrian College Library, same as the Northwood Lincoln, but much smaller.

Minnesota

 * Bloomington
 * Chief Thunderbird, by Robert Johnson, Thunderbird Hotel, 1980.
 * St Paul
 * Progress of the State, Minnesota State Capitol by Daniel Chester French and Edward Clark Potter, 1906

Mississippi

 * Vicksburg
 * Iowa Monument, by Henry Hudson Kitson, Vicksburg National Military Park, 1906–07.
 * Major-General Ulysses S. Grant, by Frederick Cleveland Hibbard, Vicksburg National Military Park, 1919.
 * Major-General John A. McClernand, by Edward Clark Potter, Vicksburg National Military Park, 1919.

Missouri

 * Independence
 * Andrew Jackson, by Charles Keck, Independence Square Courthouse, 1934, this cast 1949. It is a smaller edition of Keck's statue in Kansas City, Missouri.
 * Kansas City
 * George Washington at Valley Forge, by Henry Shrady, Washington Park, 1906, this cast 1925. A replica of Shrady's statue in Brooklyn, New York City.
 * J.C. Nichols Memorial Fountain, by Henri-Léon Gréber, Country Club Plaza, 1910. Relocated in the 1950s from Harbor Hill in Roslyn, New York. The four equestrian statues may be allegorical figures of major rivers, with the Native American rider representing the Mississippi River.
 * The Scout, by Cyrus Dallin, Penn Valley Park, overlooking Downtown Kansas City, 1915.
 * Pioneer Mother, Alexander Phimister Proctor, Penn Valley Park, 1923.
 * Andrew Jackson by Charles Keck, Jackson County Courthouse, 1934.
 * The Wagon Master, by Gus Shafer, Intercontinental Hotel, 1973.

Montana

 * Billings
 * 7th Cavalry Guidon Trooper, by Lyndon Fayne Pomeroy, KTVQ, 1978.
 * Bozeman
 * Pioneer Nelson Story, by Jim Dolan, Lindley Park, 1984.
 * Conrad
 * The Cowboy, by Jim Dolan, Conrad High School, ca. 1983.
 * Helena
 * Thomas Francis Meagher, by Charles J. Mulligan, in front of Montana State Capitol, 1904–05.


 * Miles City
 * Horse and Rider, by Leo L. Olson, Custer County High School, 1971.
 * Wolf Point
 * Homage to the Pioneers, by Floyd Tennyson DeWitt, Main Street, 1976

Nevada

 * Las Vegas
 * Tribute to a Cowboy, by Deborah Copenhaver, South Point Hotel & Casino, 1988.
 * Stateline
 * Pony Express Rider, by Avard Fairbanks, Harrah's Hotel & Casino Lake Tahoe, 1962.

New Hampshire

 * Manchester
 * General Casimir Pulaski, by Lucien H. Gosselin, Pulaski Park, 1937–38.
 * Portsmouth
 * General Fitz John Porter, by James Edward Kelly, Haven Park, 1904–06.

New Jersey

 * Hoboken
 * The Torch Bearers, by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Stevens Institute of Technology, 1953–55.

New Mexico

 * Alcalde
 * El Adelantado (Juan de Oñate Monument), by Reynaldo Rivera, Oñate Monument & Visitors Center, 1991–92. - Removed in 2020.
 * Santa Fe
 * Journey's End (Don Diego de Peralta), by Reynaldo Rivera, Santa Fe Municipal Airport, 1989.
 * The Founding of Santa Fe (Pedro de Peralta), by Dave McGary, Grant Park, 1992.

New York

 * Albany
 * General Philip Henry Sheridan Memorial, designed by John Quincy Adams Ward and completed by Daniel Chester French in 1916
 * Buffalo
 * Francisco Pizarro Monument, by Charles Cary Rumsey, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1910, this cast 1920.
 * General Daniel Davidson Bidwell, by Sahl Swarz, Colonial Circle, 1952.

North Carolina

 * Greensboro
 * Nathanael Greene Monument, by Francis Herman Packer, Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, 1913–15.

North Dakota

 * Bismarck
 * Theodore Roosevelt, by Alexander Phimister Proctor, State Historical Society of North Dakota, 1922. The full-size plaster model for Proctor's statues in Portland, Oregon and Minot, North Dakota.
 * Mandan
 * Theodore Roosevelt, by Alexander Phimister Proctor, 3rd Avenue & Main Street, 1924. A smaller version of Proctor's statue in Portland, Oregon.
 * Minot
 * Theodore Roosevelt, by Alexander Phimister Proctor, Roosevelt Park, 1922, this cast 1924. A replica of Proctor's statue in Portland, Oregon.
 * Regent
 * Theodore Roosevelt Rides Again, by Gary Greff, Enchanted Highway, Regency-Gladstone Road, 1993. A 51-foot-tall cartoon outlined in metal pipe depicting Roosevelt astride a rearing horse.

Ohio

 * Cincinnati
 * President William Henry Harrison, by Louis Rebisso, Piatt Park, 1895–96.

Oklahoma

 * Claremore
 * Riding Into the Sunset (Will Rogers), by Electra Waggoner Biggs, Will Rogers Memorial, 1941–50.
 * George Washington, by Yon Sim Pak, Rogers State University, 1987.

Oregon

 * Lincoln City
 * Abraham Lincoln on Horseback (Young Abe Lincoln), by Anna Hyatt Huntington, 22nd Street & Quay Avenue, 1961, this cast 1965.
 * Portland
 * Joan of Arc, by Emmanuel Frémiet, Coe Circle, Laurelhurst, 1890, this cast 1924.
 * Theodore Roosevelt, Rough Rider, by Alexander Phimister Proctor, South Park Blocks, 1922.

Pennsylvania

 * Gettysburg
 * Discovering the Enemy, 9th New York Cavalry Monument, by Caspar Buberl, 1888.
 * 17th Pennsylvania Cavalry Monument, by Smith Granite Company, 1889.
 * 8th Pennsylvania Cavalry Monument, by J.M. Gessler, ca. 1890.
 * Major-General Meade, by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, Cemetery Ridge, 1896.
 * General Winfield Scott Hancock, by Frank Edwin Ellwell, Cemetery Hill, 1896.
 * Major-General Slocum, by Edward Clark Potter, Steven's Knoll, Gettysburg Battlefield 1898.
 * General John F. Reynolds, by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, Gettysburg Battlefield, 1898–99.
 * General John Sedgwick, by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, Gettysburg Battlefield, 1910–13.
 * Major-General Robert E. Lee atop Virginia State Monument, by Frederick William Sievers, 1917.
 * General Oliver O. Howard, by Robert Aitken, Gettysburg Battlefield, 1932.

Rhode Island

 * Providence
 * Major General Ambrose E. Burnside, by Launt Thompson, Burnside Park, 1887.
 * Marcus Aurelius, replica of the Roman Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius, Brown University, 1908.
 * General Pulaski, by Guido Nincheri, Roger Williams Park, 1953.

South Carolina

 * Columbia
 * Wade Hampton III, by Frederick W. Ruckstull, South Carolina State House, 1903–06.
 * The Torch Bearers, by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Wardlaw College of Education, University of South Carolina, 1953, this cast 1963–65.
 * The Boy of The Waxhaws (Andrew Jackson), by Anna Hyatt Huntington, Garrett Gardens, Columbia College, 1967.

South Dakota

 * Belle Fourche
 * Lasting Legacy, by Tony R. Chytka, 5th Avenue & National Street, 1989.
 * Custer County
 * The Spirit of Crazy Horse (work in progress), by Korczak Ziolkowski, Crazy Horse Memorial, Thunderhead Mountain, begun 1948. Approximately 563 feet (172 m) tall and 641 feet (195 m) wide.

Tennessee

 * Memphis
 * Pony Express, by Avard Fairbanks, Promus Companies, 1983
 * Nathan Bedford Forrest Monument by Charles Henry Niehaus 1905, removed, present location unknown
 * Nashville
 * Nathan Bedford Forrest Equestrian Statue by Jack Kershaw, dedicated July 11, 1998. Located on south of Nashville beside I-65 North.
 * Palmyra
 * Andrew Jackson, by Enoch Tanner Wickham, 1961.
 * Dr. John W. Wickham, by Enoch Tanner Wickham, 1959.

Texas

 * Austin
 * Monument to Terry's Texas Rangers, by Pompeo Coppini, Texas State Capitol, 1901–07.
 * Littlefield Memorial Fountain, by Pompeo Coppini, University of Texas at Austin, 1919–33.
 * The Cowboy, by Constance Whitney Warren, Texas State Capitol, 1921–25.

Utah

 * St. George
 * The Rebels, by Jerry Anderson, Dixie College, 1985–87.
 * Jacob Hamblin and Indian Child, by Angelo Caravaglia, Dixie College, 1986–91.
 * Salt Lake City
 * This Is the Place Monument, equestrian bas-reliefs by Mahonri Mackintosh Young and Spero Anargyros, This Is the Place Heritage Park, 1945–47.


 * Springville
 * Mountain Man, by Angelo Caravaglia, Springville Museum of Art, 1982–86. The museum also has a collection of works by Cyrus Edwin Dallin.
 * Sixty Years in the Saddle, by Scott Myers, South & Main Streets, 1992–93.

Vermont

 * Bennington
 * Civil War Memorial (Bronze bas-relief plaque of marching soldiers), by William Gordon Huff, outside Bennington Museum, 1930.

Virginia

 * Arlington
 * Philip Kearny, by Edward Clark Potter, Arlington National Cemetery, 1912–14.
 * Field Marshal Sir John Dill, by Herbert Haseltine, Arlington National Cemetery, 1950.

Washington

 * Vantage
 * Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies by David Govedare 1989, 15 galloping horses located on a ridge overlooking the Columbia River

West Virginia

 * Charleston
 * Henry Gassaway Davis, by Louis Saint-Lanne, Davis Park, 1926.
 * Clarksburg
 * "Stonewall" Jackson, by Charles Keck, Harrison County Courthouse, 1921, this cast 1953. A replica of Keck's statue in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Wisconsin

 * Milwaukee
 * General Thaddeus Kosciuszko, by Gaetano Trentanove, Kosciuszko Park, 1906.
 * Brigadier General Erastus B. Wolcott, by Francis Herman Packer, Lake Park, 1920.
 * Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, by J. Otto Schweizer, West Lisbon Avenue, 1921.

Wyoming

 * Casper
 * Lieutenant Caspar W. Collins, by Pershing Geiger, Casper Events Center, 1981.
 * Cody
 * John Jeremiah "Liver-Eating" Johnston, by Peter M. Fillerup, Old Trail Town, ca. 1974.
 * Jackson*
 * Cowboy, by Bud Boller, George Washington Memorial Park, 1976.