Harding Memorial,
Seattle, Washington. In 1925, a memorial was erected in Seattle at
Woodland Park to commemorate the site of Harding's next-to-last public address on July 27, 1923. In 1977, the memorial was demolished and buried under the
Woodland Park Zoo's African Savanna exhibit. The memorial's only surviving elements—two life-sized bronze statues of
Boy Scouts that once saluted the image of Harding—were donated to the
Chief Seattle Council of the Boy Scouts of America. One stands at the Boy Scouts headquarters in Seattle; the other at Camp Parsons, a Boy Scouts camp in Brinnon, Jefferson County, Washington.[1]
In a neighborhood of
Ketchikan, Alaska, north of the original townsite (or present-day downtown), three adjoining streets were named Warren, G and Harding following Harding's visit to the city.