Community Corner

Bayfront Surrenders, Gives Up Kissing Statue

The Midway Museum though, has raised nearly $1 million to put a replica in its place.

Workers on Wednesday began removing the statue of a sailor kissing a nurse near the USS Midway Aircraft Carrier Museum on San Diego's downtown waterfront.

The 25-foot-tall sculpture, called “Unconditional Surrender,” is based on the iconic 1945 Life magazine cover photo taken in New York's Time Square when the end of World War II was announced. It's a popular place for amorous tourists to replicate the kiss and take photographs.

The piece was loaned to San Diego in 2007 by the Sculpture Foundation and is headed for New Jersey, where it will undergo maintenance before the Santa Monica-based foundation sends it to another city.

Find out what's happening in Coronadowith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The roughly 6,000-pound sculpture and its 24,000-pound base will be shipped aboard two flatbed trucks, according to the Port of San Diego.

“This is kind of a bittersweet day,” the museum's Scott McGaugh told News8.

Find out what's happening in Coronadowith free, real-time updates from Patch.

He said it was sad to see the statue go, but noted that Midway officials were working to get a permanent bronze version installed by the end of this year.

Over the Memorial Day weekend, museum officials announced that an eight- week fundraising campaign raised $998,000, enough to pay for the replacement. Seven San Diegans chipped in $100,000, and the museum tossed in the same amount.

– City News Service


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Coronado