The Signing of the Mayflower Compact

Lee Lawrie

Indiana Limestone Relief

Signing of the Mayflower Compact by Lee Lawrie

About this piece

This relief shows a group of pilgirms on the Mayflower establishing their compact. To the right of the relief, a man sits at a table signing a document hanging over the edge that reads “Mayflower Compact 1620,” while six other men stand around him. To the left, a woman sits with a child on her knees, both are looking out the window in anticipation of their new lives.

The exterior reliefs of the Capitol depict the history of western civilization. The Nebraska State Capitol is clad in Indiana Limestone.

About Lee Lawrie

Lee Lawrie

Lee Lawrie was born in Germany in 1877 and came to America with his family four years later. As a young boy, he sketched the world around him and it became apparent he had great artistic talent. His first formal job as an artist came at 14 when he was hired in a sculptor’s studio to do odd jobs. It was at this job he taught himself how to model clay in the evenings. He would eventually attend Yale where he earned a bachelor’s of fine arts. He stayed at Yale where he taught until 1919.

Lawrie and Bertram Goodhue met in the late 1800s when the two began collaborating on various projects. Lawrie specialized in architectural sculpture, which was a direct compliment to Goodhue’s appreciation of early Gothic revival designs. The two would achieve a breakthrough in their approach during the construction of the Nebraska State Capitol. They created an approach that fused architecture and sculpture into an integrated and simple design.

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