<Ul> <Li> In Durango, Mexico, a small replica is in Parque Guadiana . This park also has other small reproductions such as the Eiffel Tower and Taj Mahal . </Li> </Ul> <Li> In Durango, Mexico, a small replica is in Parque Guadiana . This park also has other small reproductions such as the Eiffel Tower and Taj Mahal . </Li> <Ul> <Li> From 1902 to 2002, visitors to midtown Manhattan were occasionally disoriented by what seemed to be an impossibly nearby view of the statue . They were seeing a 30 - foot - high (9.1 m) replica located at 43 West 64th Street atop the Liberty Warehouse . In February 2002, the statue was removed by the building's owners to allow the building to be expanded . It was donated to the Brooklyn Museum of Art, which installed it in its sculpture garden in October 2005 with plans to restore it on site in spring of 2006 . </Li> <Li> A bronze sculpture of the Statue of Liberty is on display in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City . </Li> <Li> Duluth, Minnesota, has a small copy on the south corner of the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center property, in the center of a clearing surrounded by pine trees where it may be passed unnoticed . It was presented to the city by some of Bartholdi's descendants residing in Duluth . </Li> <Li> The Boy Scouts of America celebrated their fortieth anniversary in 1950 with the theme of "Strengthen the Arm of Liberty". Between 1949 and 1952, approximately two hundred 100 - inch (2.5 m) replicas of the statue, made of stamped copper, were purchased by Boy Scout troops and donated in 39 states in the U.S. and several of its possessions and territories . The project was the brainchild of Kansas City businessman J.P. Whitaker, who was then Scout Commissioner of the Kansas City Area Council . The copper statues were manufactured by Friedley - Voshardt Co . (Chicago, Illinois) and purchased through the Kansas City Boy Scout office by those wanting one . The statues are approximately 8 ⁄ feet (2.6 m) tall without the base, are constructed of sheet copper, weigh 290 pounds (130 kg), and originally cost $350 plus freight . The mass - produced statues are not great art nor meticulously accurate (a conservator notes that "her face isn't as mature as the real Liberty . It's rounder and more like a little girl's"), but they are cherished, particularly since 9 / 11 . Many have been lost or destroyed, but preservationists have been able to account for about a hundred of them, and BSA Troop 101 of Cheyenne, Wyoming, has collected photographs of over 100 of them . They are commonly installed at city halls, libraries, and schools . One of these statues was sent to the Philippines . After some years at the mouth of the Pasig River, Manila, it was kept in a store room at the Scout Reservation, Makiling, Laguna, for about two decades . It is now stored at the national office of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines, Manila . </Li> <Li> A replica of the original statue was unveiled on October 12, 2011, at 667 Madison Avenue in Manhattan . Its owner, billionaire Leonard N. Stern, purchased it after reading about it in the local news . The replica is one of only 12 cast from the original mold created by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi using digital surface scanning and lost - wax casting methods, and is the only one currently on public display . The statue itself is 9 feet tall and 15 feet including the pedestal on which it stands . </Li> </Ul> <Li> From 1902 to 2002, visitors to midtown Manhattan were occasionally disoriented by what seemed to be an impossibly nearby view of the statue . They were seeing a 30 - foot - high (9.1 m) replica located at 43 West 64th Street atop the Liberty Warehouse . In February 2002, the statue was removed by the building's owners to allow the building to be expanded . It was donated to the Brooklyn Museum of Art, which installed it in its sculpture garden in October 2005 with plans to restore it on site in spring of 2006 . </Li>

Where are the three statue of liberties located