Battery Park in New York City is a great park to visit because there is so much to see in a small area. The park has a waterfront promenade with excellent views of the Statue of Liberty and the New York City waterways. It is full of history too, with an old fort and numerous statues and memorials. Any tourist who takes a ferry from Manhattan to Liberty Island to see the Statue of Liberty has walked through Battery Park to get to the ferry terminal.
A Nice View in Every Direction
The park is framed on the north side by the tall buildings of Lower Manhattan and on the south side by the New York Harbor.
Because it is the launch point to the Statue of Liberty, the park generally has a lot of tourists and the things that tend to follow tourists.
Souvenir vendors and performers tend to hang out around Castle Clinton, where the ferry tickets are sold.
You may see a few people dressed up as the Statue of Liberty, hoping you will pay a few coins to have your picture taken with them.
Statues & Memorials in Battery Park
Battery Park is full of statues and memorials dedicated to various historical events. Some of our favorites include:
Castle Clinton National Monument
Castle Clinton is the major historical landmark of Battery Park in New York City. This structure was built in 1811 as a fort to defend New York Harbor. The fort held 28 canons, but never saw any military action. It was designated a National Monument in 1946.
Castle Clinton now functions as a visitor center for the National Park Service. A booth inside the walls of the fort sells ferry tickets to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.
How does an island disappear? The fort was originally built on a small island that was linked to the rest of Manhattan by a drawbridge. The space between the two was later filled in to extend Manhattan.
East Coast Memorial
This memorial has an eagle on a pedestal, which faces the Statue of Liberty and is centered between two rows of granite pylons. The eight pylons bear the names of American servicemen who died in the Atlantic Ocean during World War II.
Korean War Veterans Memorial
This monument to the veterans of the Korean Conflict features a granite obelisk with a cut-out in the shape of a soldier, known as the Universal Soldier.
When standing on the north side of the monument, you can look through the cut-out and see the park and water in the background.
The designer, MacAdams, designed the monument to serve as a sundial. The base of the monument is decorated with mosaics of the flags of countries that participated in the conflict.
The Immigrants
The Immigrants sculpture is located near Castle Clinton, which processed newly arrived immigrants in the late 1800s before the operation was moved to Ellis Island.
The statue portrays immigrants from different parts of the world and from different time periods. All are inexpressive postures, highlighting the struggles and hardships that immigrants face.
American Merchant Mariners’ Memorial
This touching memorial is dedicated to merchant mariners who have died at sea. It portrays men in a sinking lifeboat. The scene is based on an actual event in which a Nazi U-boat attacked a merchant marine vessel during World War II. The Nazis aboard the U-boat then photographed the victims clinging to their sinking boat. This monument in Battery Park in Lower Manhattan, New York City, represents a man in the water reaching up to grasp the outstretched hand of one of three merchant mariners on board a lifeboat.
This bronze sculpture by Marisol Escobar was inspired by that photograph. The sorrowful scene of the men calling for help and attempting to rescue one who has fallen into the water is quite poignant.