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No - - - there is Only One anything else is a model or replica reposing on desk or at a theme park.


Here I will cite Wikipedia aware there will be multinious thumbs down and impassioned pleas for my lynching.....
(Yahoo ers are such a peaceful bunch)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replicas_of_the_Statue_of_Liberty
"""Replicas of the Statue of Liberty
Hundreds of smaller replicas of the Statue of Liberty have been erected worldwide.
Statue of Liberty on the river Seine in Paris, France. Given to the city in 1889, it faces west, towards the original Liberty in New York Harbor.Two replicas of the Statue of Liberty are found in Paris, France. One stands in the Jardin du Luxembourg. Another, larger, one is near the Grenelle Bridge on the Île des Cygnes, an island in the river Seine (48°51′0″N, 2°16′47″E, 11.50 m (37 feet 9 inches) high. Dedicated on November 15, 1889, it looks towards the Atlantic Ocean and hence towards its "larger sister" in New York Harbor, which had been erected three years earlier. It is shown in the movie National Treasure: Book of Secrets.

A life-size copy of the torch, Flame of Liberty, can be seen near the Champs Elysees in Paris. It was given to the city as a return gift in honor of the Centennial Celebration of the statue's dedication. Since it is above the car tunnel in which Princess Diana was killed, the torch became an unofficial memorial to the Princess.[citation needed]

Another replica is the Bordeaux Statue of Liberty. This 2.5 m (8 ft) statue is in the city of Bordeaux in Southwest France. The first Bordeaux statue was seized and melted down by the Nazis in World War II. The statue was replaced in 2000 and a plaque was added to commemorate the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks. On the night of March 25, 2003, unknown vandals poured red paint and gasoline on the replica and set it on fire. The vandals also cracked the pedestal of the plaque. The mayor of Bordeaux, former prime minister Alain Juppé, condemned the attack.

There is another replica in the northwest of France, in the small town of Barentin near Rouen. It was made for a French movie, Le Cerveau ("the brain"), directed by Gérard Oury and featuring actors Jean-Paul Belmondo and Bourvil.[1]

Another replica, which is golden, is located in the center of the town Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer near Marseilles, France.[2][3]

A 12 m (39 ft 4 in) replica of the Statue of Liberty in Colmar, the city of Bartholdi's birth, was dedicated on July 4, 2004 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his death. It stands at the north entrance of the city[4][5] The Bartholdi Museum in Colmar contains numerous models of various sizes made by Bartholdi during the process of designing the statue.[6]


[edit] United States

Full-scale replica of the statue's face.
One of the 200 Lady Liberty statues donated by the Boy Scouts of America is located on Michigan’s Mackinac Island in historic Haldimand BayFrom 1902 to 2002, visitors to Midtown Manhattan were occasionally disoriented by what seemed to be an impossibly nearby view of the statue. They were seeing a 37-foot (11.3 m) high replica located at 43 West 64th Street atop the Liberty Warehouse.[7] In February 2002 the statue was removed by the building's owners to allow the building to be expanded.[8] It was donated to the Brooklyn Museum of Art which installed it in its sculpture garden on October 2005, and plans to restore it on site in spring of 2006.[9][10]

A bronze sculpture of the Statue of Liberty is on display in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.[11]

Duluth, Minnesota, has a small copy on the west side of the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center, in the center of a clearing surrounded by pine trees where it may be passed unnoticed. It was presented to the city by some of Bartholdi's descendants residing in Duluth.[12][13]

The Boy Scouts of America celebrated their fortieth anniversary in 1950 with the theme of "Strengthen the Arm of Liberty".[14] Between 1949 and 1952, approximately two hundred 100-inch (2.5 m) replicas of the statue, made of stamped copper, were purchased by Boy Scout troops and donated to various towns in the United States. The mass-produced statues are not great art nor meticulously accurate (a conservator notes that "her face isn't as mature as the real Liberty. It's rounder and more like a little girl's"), but they are cherished, particularly since 9/11. Many have been lost or destroyed, but preservationists have been able to account for about a hundred of them, and BSA Troop 101 of Cheyenne, Wyoming has collected photographs of over 100 of them.[15][16]


Replica of the Statue of Liberty, Las VegasThere is a half-size replica at the New York-New York Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.[17][18][19][20] Another smaller replica stands in Las Vegas, on West Sahara Avenue (36° 8'39.20"N, 115°11'50.05"W). The pedestal houses a local business, Statue of Liberty Pizza.

The city of Sioux Falls, South Dakota erected a replacement bronze reproduction standing 9 ft (2.7 m) tall in McKennan Park atop the original pedestal for a long-missing wooden replica.[21]

A small replica stands in Mountain Brook, a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama.[22][23][24]

Two 12 m (39 ft 4 in) replicas stand atop the Liberty Building in Buffalo, New York, nearly 108 m (354 ft) above street level.[25][26]

A 25 ft (7.6 m) tall replica sits on an abandoned Marysville bridge platform in the Dauphin Narrows of Susquehanna River at Harrisburg. The replica was built by a local activist Gene Stilp on July 2, 1986; it was made of venetian blinds and stood 18 feet (5.5 m) tall. Six years later, after it was destroyed in a windstorm, it was rebuilt by Stilp and other local citizens, of wood, metal, glass and fiberglass, to a height of 25 feet (7.6 m).[27][28][29]


Statue of Liberty replica at Legoland CaliforniaA LEGO replica of the Statue of Liberty consisting of 2882 bricks and standing 0.9 m (3 ft) is a popular sculpture among LEGO enthusiasts. The statue went out of production, but due to popular demand was returned to sale. (See External links below).[30] A much larger replica built entirely in LEGO can be seen in Legoland Billund.[citation needed] A smaller version of the Billund model is on display at the Legoland California amusement park.

A 25-foot (7.6 m) replica of the Statue, lofting a Christian cross, holding the Ten Commandments, and named the "Statue of Liberation through Christ", was erected by a predominantly African-American church in Memphis, Tennessee on July 4, 2006. [31]

A small replica stands on the grounds of the Cherokee Capital Building in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, a gift from the local Boy Scouts in 1950.[32]

Fargo, North Dakota also has a replica of the statue of liberty on the corner of Main Ave. & 2nd Street at the entrance of the Main avenue bridge. [33]

The Kansas State Capitol in Topeka, Kansas has a replica of the Statue of Liberty.


[edit] Elsewhere
From 1887 to 1945, Hanoi was home to another copy of the statue. Measuring 2.85 m (9 ft 4 in) tall, it was erected by the French colonial government after being sent from France for an exhibition. It was known to locals unaware of its history as Tượng Bà đầm xòe (Statue of the Open-Dress Dame). When the French lost control of French Indochina during World War II, the statue was toppled on August 1, 1945 after being deemed a vestige of the colonial government along with other statues erected by the French.[34]


The "Goddess of Democracy".During the Tiananmen Square protest of 1989, Chinese student demonstrators in Beijing built a 10 m (33 ft) image called the Goddess of Democracy, which sculptor Tsao Tsing-yuan said was intentionally dissimilar to the Statue of Liberty to avoid being "too openly pro-American." (See article for a list of replicas of that statue.)

In 1897 a 123 cm (4 ft 0 in) replica in iron and bronze was erected in Cenicero, Spain, to honor local fighters during the First Carlist War. In 1936 it was removed during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco. It was restored in 1976 and moved indoor in 1997 because of deterioration. A new bronze statue replaced it in the original plaza.[35]


Statue of Liberty replica at Odaiba, overlooking the Rainbow Bridge in Tokyo BayIn Japan, the French Statue of Liberty came to Odaiba, the beach area of Tokyo since April 1998 until May 1999 in commemoration of "The French year in Japan". Because of its popularity, in 2000, a replica of the French Statue of Liberty was erected at the same place (Photo). Also in Japan, a small Statue of Liberty is in the Amerika-mura (American Village) shopping district in Osaka, Japan.

A smaller replica is in the Norwegian village of Visnes, where the copper used in the original statue was mined.[36]


Downsized replica of the Statue, displayed at Visnes Copper Mine, Karmøy, Norway.A replica stands atop the Hotel Victory in Priština, Kosovo (Serbia).[37]

In Minimundus, a miniature park located at the Wörthersee in Carinthia, Austria is another replica of the Statue of Liberty.[38]

There is also a small replica located at RAF Lakenheath at the base flag plaza, made from leftover copper from original.[39]

At a highway intersection in Jerusalem called "New York Square," there is an abstract skeletal replica of the Statue.[citation needed]

A 35 m (115 ft) copy is in the German Heidepark Soltau theme park, located on a lake with cruising Mississippi steamboats. It weighs 28 tonnes (31 short tons), is made of plastic foam on a steel frame with polyester cladding, and was designed by the Dutch artist Gerla Spee.[40]

Camp John Hay, a former US base in the Baguio City (Philippines), also has a small replica of the statue near the amphitheater."""


Peace......... o o o p p o o p p o o

http://www.americanparknetwork.com/parkinfo/content.asp?catid=68&contenttypeid=35#1501

2007-12-16 17:06:47 · answer #1 · answered by JVHawai'i 7 · 1 1

Statue Of Liberty France

2016-09-28 00:59:12 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There are two. The original is in France where the artist Frederic Auguste Bartholdo lived and it was a small version of what was to be given to the United States. It was the model for the current statue on the Island in the New York harbour.
The Statue was built in France with copper over an iron framework. The engineer who designed the iron frame work was Alexandre Gustave Eiffel the one who created the Eiffel Tower.
The Statue of Liberty was originally titled " Liberty Enlightening the World". It was a gift from the people of France to the United States in 1886.
The original which is a small sculpture is in Paris France where the Statue was originally built.

2007-12-16 17:25:05 · answer #3 · answered by the old dog 7 · 1 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Is there really two statue of liberties? If there is, where's the fake and the real statue?

2015-08-18 14:22:23 · answer #4 · answered by Eugenio 1 · 0 0

there were two statues made...both real and one went to new york as a gift from france and the other stayed in france...

in america, we made the stand she's on the same height as the statue, but in france they didn't so they really are the same but one's much taller and a national icon, and the others a statue.

2007-12-16 17:08:45 · answer #5 · answered by miss macy zane 3 · 0 0

I've never heard that. I saw a fake one at a park in Tokyo. Mabe thats it.

2007-12-16 17:05:00 · answer #6 · answered by kagen_4 2 · 0 1

There's more than two!! They're all real.

2007-12-16 17:09:57 · answer #7 · answered by whatzername? 4 · 0 2

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