Henry K. Bush-Brown

This statue was created after two years of research, and portrays "Meade without a hat, as he appeared during the battle," in keeping with Bush-Brown's commitment to historical accuracy.

Following the production of Meade, Bush-Brown created a 9,000-pound monument of General John F. Reynolds (killed in action July 1, 1863),[8] in which the horse has only two feet on the ground.

[11] In 1910 he created a bronze statue of Mary Jemison, "The White Woman of the Genesee", which marks her grave in New York's Letchworth State Park.

[12] Apart from his numerous sculptures related to American history, Bush-Brown was also the author of an unpublished biographical manuscript detailing the life and work of his uncle.

Bush-Brown died in Washington, D.C., and was buried in Baldwin Memorial United Methodist Church Cemetery in Millersville, Maryland.

Bush-Brown's first equestrian statue was a monument to Union General George Meade on the Gettysburg Battlefield , located close to the point where Pickett's Charge was repulsed.
Monument to General John F. Reynolds on the Gettysburg Battlefield ; the horse has two feet raised, presenting problems of balance and construction.
The Lincoln Address Memorial , designed by Louis Henrick, with bust of Abraham Lincoln by Henry Kirke Bush-Brown, erected at the Gettysburg Battlefield in 1912 [ 1 ]