By 1812Blockhouse

1812Blockhouse shares posts in our “Richland Roots” series to reveal stories of the less-commonly known people born here, or who lived here, and then went on to make significant contributions to state, regional, or national history.

This year, we are going to be sharing many of these coinciding with the America 250-Ohio organizational committee’s monthly themes. This February, it is “Innovation and Industry.” Today’s honoree fits that description.

There are recognized experts in many artistic endeavors that have produced one significant, known work, be it a piece of music or work of art.

Such is the case with a Mansfield man who was an obviously talented architect of granite monuments, but who has only one major commission known to have been built. That particular work, the Steuben County Veterans Monument in Angola, Indiana (pictured above), is a towering column that recently saw a major restoration effort take place.

James Clifton Ayres was born in October, 1878, and by the age of 25 was working in the offices of W.A. Hambleton, a Mansfield seller of granite monuments. He and his family lived at 35 Helen Avenue, and he was obviously well-respected for his work. Trade magazines of the mid-1910s mentioned him often as not only showing at regional competitions for marble and granite design, but in winning many of them. At the 1916 National Retail Monument Convention in Cleveland, for instance, he took top prize in all three of the classes.

His major surviving work in Angola was a high profile commission. Over 1,900 Steuben County residents had petitioned for the creation of the monument, designed to recognize the contributions of the 1,278 county men who served in the US Civil War, of which 240 lost their lives.

The monument is of Barre granite from Vermont, and is faced at the base with four large bronze statues. It is 19 feet, 6 inches square and soars to 70 feet. Total cost of the monument was $16,000.

Not only has Ayres’ work survived now for 104 years since it was erected, it underwent its second major restoration in the summer of 2020. This article entitled “Monument scheduled for a tuneup” profiles the work which was accomplished.

James Ayres died in an automobile accident just five years after the monument was dedicated. He is buried in Piqua, but obviously his work lives on.

Sources: Wikipedia, The Steuben Republican, Find-a-Grave, various trade journals

You May Also Like

When Mansfield Welcomed: The Fisk Jubilee Singers

Mansfield is one of the places where American musical history was made

OSR Earns Statewide Spotlight

Historic Mansfield landmark earns statewide praise for architecture and lasting influence

A Mansfield Landmark Heads To Auction

One of Mansfield’s most iconic structures is now open for a new chapter

Everything You Always Wanted To Know About: WMAN Radio

Eight decades later, the station is still going strong.