[5] The stonework was created by the sculptor Hannes Starkopf and the Dolokivi company under the leadership of Volli Sai.
At the top of the front of the column is a relief image of the Cross of Liberty and the text Eesti Vabadussõjas 1918–1920 (Estonian War of Independence 1918–1920).
At the top of the back of the obelisk is a Cross of St. George and the text Ilmasõjas 1914–1918 (Air War 1914–1918) and the names of the 132 fallen, with a relief sword and a laurel branch below it.
The upper one depicts a woman (a mother) sending a man (her son) off to war, shaking hands with her loved one for the last time.
The lower plinth has the inscription Ilus on surra isamaa eest (It is beautiful to die for one's country).
The text on the plinth reads Mehise meelele asuta koda, priiusel pühenend eestlaste muld (Build a home for the manly mind, consecrate the Estonian soil to freedom), a quote from Lydia Koidula's poem "Teretus" (Greeting).