Personifications of allegorical figures

I have long been a big fan of allegorical figures, such as these two outside the Chicago Board of Trade.

My education in such things was slightly deficient. I mean, every educated person ought to be able to look at such a figure and identify it by the signifiers, the way nearly everybody can recognize Liberty and Justice. These two are only slightly more obscure, so I was able to identify them. (Especially in context—they are particularly appropriate for the Chicago Board of Trade, where commodities are traded.)

A large statue of a woman with a gear and an anchor standing in a public square
Industry, with a gear, anvil, and an anchor
A large statue of a woman with fruit and grain standing in a public square
Agriculture, with a cornucopia of fruit and corn and with sheaves of wheat

There are many more that I can’t reliably recognize—Fame, Victory, Hope, Time, etc. I’ve looked from time to time to find a nice compact reference with pictures and descriptions, and haven’t found exactly what I was looking for.

In any case, it was fun to see these two, just across the street from the Chicago Federal Reserve Bank, where we had gone to visit the Money Museum—about which I hope to write a post soon.

Philip Brewer @philipbrewer