Memorial stones are the bricks that are seen on the inside of the Washington Monument. There are 193 memorial bricks.
Yes, the state of Maine has a special brick in the Washington Monument. Maine's memorial stone may be seen at the 30-foot landing.
In Washington D.C. the reflecting pool has the Lincoln Memorial at the west and the WWII memorial at the east end. The Washington Monument Memorial can be seen in the pool also if you are at the west end looking east.
YES
Error coins are difficult to evaluate based on a description. It really needs to be seen in person by a dealer or appraiser who works with error coins.But before you present that description to anyone, some things need to be clarified:US nickels feature Thomas Jefferson, not George Washington. Washington is on the quarter.The building on the back is Monticello, as the caption under it states, not the Washington Monument. Monticello was Jefferson's home.
From the Moon all you can see is planet Earth, the Moon is too far away to see any detail such as a monument on Earth with the naked eye.
Giza Pyramids (Egypt) Great wall (China) khansai airport (Japan)
You can get your answer herehttp://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/visible_from_space_031006.htmlI also posted that in related links
Many countries have a 'Tomb of the Unknown Soldier' monument. Besides the United States, they can be seen in France, England, Romania, and Hungary.
The statue of "Christ the Redeemer" in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
in Jordan boultons pants because he seen a really hot girl on his way to the gym on a warm summers day
Inside a cocoon, the most fascinating thing I have ever seen is the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly.
In "A Rose for Emily," Emily becomes a monument due to her refusal to change with the times and her isolation from the community. She is seen as a symbol of the fading aristocratic South, and her home, which once stood out prominently, becomes a representation of both her and the town's reluctance to adapt. Her death at the end solidifies her status as a figurative monument, frozen in time.