October 07, 2025

Some memorials of Rhode Island

Honor & Remembrance
News
The Smithfield War Memorial. (Photo via legion.org/memorials)
The Smithfield War Memorial. (Photo via legion.org/memorials)

The older the state, the older the remembrance you might encounter.

Rhode Island may be the youngest of the original 13 colonies, but 1790 still puts it roughly in the top quarter of states by age. Some of its entries on The American Legion’s national memorial database reflect that longevity.

Vietnam Memorial, Smithfield: “This square is dedicated to the memory of 1st LT. James Panzarella and S/SGT. C. William Silvia.”

Smithfield War Memorial, Smithfield: “‘Lest we forget – a payment for peace.’ The Smithfield Town Hall WWII Honor Roll Monument was originally dedicated in November 1944.”

Wolf Hill Plane Crash Memorial, Greenville: “Sixty-six years after three servicemen lost their lives in a military plane crash on Wolf Hill, in Smithfield, Rhode Island, two memorials were dedicated in the Town of Smithfield honoring their sacrifice. On August 5, 1943, Lieutenant Saul Winsten, of Pawtucket, RI, Lieutenant Otis R. Portewig, of Richmond, VA, and Sgt Herbert D. Booth, of Rahway, New Jersey, perished in the line of duty while on a routine flight from Westover Field to Otis Field in Massachusetts. The flight path brought them over Rhode Island where their aircraft lost an engine and crashed. (For more detailed information, see The Wolf Hill Plane Crash on the Town of Smithfield website, www.smithfieldri.com.)”

Esmond Mills Memorial, Smithfield: “’HONOR ROLL 1914–1918 THE ESMOND MILLS DEDICATED TO THOSE WHO SERVED THEIR COUNTRY IN THE WORLD WAR.’ Esmond Mills was a textile mill which employed many in the village of Esmond, now a part of Smithfield.”

Hope Furnace Cannon Memorial, Hope: “The cannon, which has passed ownership several times, is the only pre-Revolutionary War cannon in Rhode Island cast by the Hope Furnace Foundry. The cannon was reportedly found in 1910 in Hope Lake by a fisherman who kept it in his barn. Later the cannon was dedicated to the Crompton School in West Warwick in 1930. Hope Furnace, located in the village of Hope in Scituate, was Rhode Island's first iron works foundry and was a major producer of war implements during the Revolutionary War. The foundry also cast cannons for USS Constitution or ‘Old Ironsides.’”

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