An explicit, bright red graffiti was discovered on the Lincoln Memorial Tuesday morning at around 4.30 a.m. Officials said the red spray paint appears to state “[expletive] law” on one of the memorial’s columns overlooking the National Mall. Another instance in silver spray paint was also discovered on a Smithsonian way finding sign in the 1400 block of Constitution Avenue.
This isn’t the first instance of vandalism on the Lincoln Memorial or other national monuments.
It was the first incident of vandalism on the monument since its dedication in 1922. In July 2013, the giant statue of the 16th president was splashed with green paint on the left pant leg. More recently, over the President’s Day weekend in February 2017, the Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument and World War II Memorial, three of D.C.’s most popular monuments, were vandalized with marker pen.
Memorial’s North Dakota column was also defaced with spray paint in November 2016, in what was believed to be a sign of protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline
Work to remove the graffiti is already underway using a mild, gel-type architectural paint stripper, according to the NPS. The gel won’t affect the preservation of the memorial’s historic stone. The crew will apply the treatment and let it set on the stone for approximately an hour, then rinse it with “clean, potable” water, according to the NPS. The process is repeated until “all evidence of the graffiti is gone.”
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