History & Culture
Carmel Gathers Revolutionary Memory by Lake Gleneida
The Sybil Ludington statue gives Carmel a visible Revolutionary memory on the Lake Gleneida shore.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified July 4, 2026
Carmel keeps one of Putnam County’s best-known memory markers beside Lake Gleneida. Putnam County says the bronze equestrian statue honors Sybil Ludington and her legendary 1777 ride. The county also says the statue was unveiled in 1961 and gifted to Putnam County in 1985.
Preserve Putnam County places the statue along Lake Gleneida in Carmel and names Anna Hyatt Huntington as the sculptor. That gives the landmark a clear set of parts: lakefront setting, public art, Revolutionary memory, and county care.
The county’s restoration story adds a good modern layer. Putnam County described Daughters of the American Revolution support for the “Restore Sybil” project, with conservation work planned for surface cleaning, patina restoration, protective finishing, and repairs to the fieldstone pedestal. That is a small but telling detail: local memory still needs hands, money, and maintenance.
It is worth keeping the wording careful. The public sources use “legendary” language for the ride, so the statue is best read as civic memory rather than a simple proof-text for every detail of the story.
Even with that care, the landmark has a lot of local force. A bronze rider beside water and public roads feels different from a story stored indoors. People can pass it during errands, school trips, county business, or a walk around the lake.
That daily visibility is the point. Carmel does not hide this older story. It keeps it where people can notice it, ask about it, and remember that local history is often carried by places as much as by books.