Mt. Rushmore
With a Native American superintendent, the South Dakota monument is becoming much more than a shrine to four presidents.
- By Tony Perrottet
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Crazy Horse Rides Again
“Fire in the hole! Fire in the hole! Fire in the hole!”
As the voice rings out, all eyes are fixed on a scarred mountainside where the enormous head and torso of the Lakota chief Crazy Horse can be clearly made out. He sits on horseback, his arm pointing toward the horizon. Then a dynamite blast tears the silence, sending a shower of granite boulders thundering to earth; the huge charge, one of two or three every week in summer, makes barely a dent in the neck of the warrior’s horse.
Only 15 miles from Mount Rushmore, a monolithic new image is emerging from the Black Hills granite: a 563-foot-tall sculpture of the famous Native American who defeated Custer at Little Bighorn in 1876. Today a visit to the site testifies to the growing interest in Native American themes: even as a work in progress, Crazy Horse has already become a must-see counterpart to Mount Rushmore, luring more than one million visitors last year. (Rushmore had three million.)
Its scale is mind-boggling. When finished, the sculpture will be the world’s largest mountain carving—dwarfing such monuments as the Great Pyramid of Giza and the Statue of Liberty. In fact, all four of Rushmore’s presidents will fit inside Crazy Horse’s 87.5-foot-tall head. The memorial depicts Crazy Horse responding to a taunt from a white trader before his death in 1877. Asked what had become of his lands, he replied: “My lands are where my dead lie buried.”
The new monument was conceived in the late 1930s by Chief Henry Standing Bear, a Lakota. As Mount Rushmore neared completion, he wrote that he wanted to show the world that “the red man has great heroes, too.” In 1939, the chief invited a muscular Boston sculptor, Korczak Ziolkowski, to undertake a sculpture of Crazy Horse. After serving in the Army in World War II, Ziolkowski leased a vast chunk of the Black Hills and started work on the monolith in 1948. “Every man has his mountain,” he said at the time. “I’m carving mine!” In the late 1970s, looking like a latter-day Walt Whitman, with a huge white beard and a broad-rimmed hat, his wife and ten children laboring away at his side, he was still carving. Perhaps mindful of Borglum’s years of wrangling with bureaucrats, Ziolkowski refused to let the U.S. government become involved in the project, twice turning down grants of $10 million. Instead, he funded the project with private donations and contributions from visitors. This meant that progress was slow. When Ziolkowski died in 1982, the sculpture was only a vague outline; many locals assumed it would be abandoned.
But Ziolkowski’s family rallied to continue the work. In 1998, Crazy Horse’s completed face was unveiled, creating the sort of publicity that Borglum had enjoyed in 1930 when he revealed his first finished image, of Washington. Seemingly overnight, a chimerical project had become real, bringing streams of tourists intent upon learning more about Indian history. In 2000, a cathedral-like visitor center opened at the memorial, with a museum, Native American cultural center, and cinema. Plans also include a university and medical training center for Native Americans.
When might the monolith be finished? “There’s no way to estimate,” says Ruth Ziolkowski, the sculptor’s widow, who is nearly 80 and CEO and president of the nonprofit Crazy Horse Memorial Foundation. “It would be nothing but a wild guess anyway. We’re not trying to be difficult. We just don’t know. Korczak always said it wasn’t important when it was finished as long as it was done right.”
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Comments (13)
ABOUT 1940 ME MY GRANDPA MY MOTHER CLIMED UP THE BACK OF MT RUSHMORE.ME AN MY GRANDPA CLIMED TO THE TOP OF WASHINGTONS HEAD WHILE MY MOTHER STAYED BACK TO TAKE OUR PICTURE ON TOP OF WASHINGTONS HEAD. I STILL HAVE THAT PICTURE.I WILL BE 84 IN NOV. MY E- MAIL IS FSONNY11@YAHOO.COM COMMENT POSTED 8-21-12
Posted by F J (JACK) SONNEBORN on August 21,2012 | 02:34 PM
In the above Posting by Stanton Berneil Georgeson- Jan/21/12
- I wrote the down the wrong date. I said: Summer of 1944!
- I was 19 years old and the correct date was Summer 1945!
- Now it might be possible for someone with this "10 Year" correction to locate photos that (they) 0r (Mom or Dad) or (Grandma or Grandpa) took of a guy on top of the Presidents Heads at Moumt Rushmore "That Summer 1954" Someone has a photo, I know it!!
armyduck@att.net .... (Later If you wish we could talk by phone).
Posted by Stanton B. Georgeson on February 18,2012 | 03:42 PM
- In the summer of 1944 (when I was nineteen) My cousin and I climbed around the presidents heads nowing full well that this could be very dangerous and get us in deep trouble!
- My cousin was down below taking pictures of the presidents noses. .... I climbed around the right side of the faces and after a combination of many many combinations of possible assents I found there was only one that this Norwegian could find!
- To keep this wild adventure short "I finally arived at the top of the hill where The Presidents Heads were located but I was standing overlooking the presidents heads from behind them. I was standing over the 80 foot deep tunnel "The Hall Of Records".It was about 40 ft. below me but I couldn't see it until until I crossed the 40 ft. gap over a small railroad track that was there to bring workers and their tools over to work on the heads. Only a single rail was left. the other one frose off the winter before! I had to cat walk ,on my hands and knees to reach the presidents heads.
- I arrived on Washingtons Hesd first. Then Jeffersons Head anthen Roosevelts. .. IS THERE SOMEONE OUT THERE IN AMERICA THAT HAS A PHOTOGRAPH OF ME ON THE PRESIDENTS HEADS FROM WAY BACK IN THE SUMMER OF 1944???? ( In your mom and dads picture book)??? Someone has at least 0ne or two........... email.... armyduck@att.net---- I will pay and add you to my "BOOK" Thanks Bernie
Posted by Stanton Berneil Georgeson on January 21,2012 | 04:23 PM
i found a photo a few years ago that shows the profile of an indian face left of washington way larger then the presidents heads ... from what i understand is it is only clearly visable 1 or 2 times a year with the position of the sun casting shadows just right ... but why do i not find anything about this anywhere ?
Posted by jerry on December 14,2011 | 10:37 PM
The Black Hills were sacred mountains to the Lakota- Paha Sapa. It had been that way from the beginning. The Americans knew that it was sacred land to the Paha Sapa, and they continued to desecrate it. Why? Because there was gold to be found there. To add insult to injury, the Americans created Mount Rushmore with the faces of presidents who stole their land. The most latest insult to the Lakota is the ridiculous "monument" to Crazy Horse. There has never been a picture of Crazy Horse in his lifetime, so this is just a wasichu fabrication.
Posted by Pat Bair on September 23,2011 | 11:07 AM
Yeah, that's all well and good about Hiking up mt rushmore, but what about being able to rock climb the faces? That's what i really want to know, cuz that would be really awesome and fun.
Posted by Buff on June 7,2011 | 01:36 PM
Dear Caroline Miniscule, your words regarding the first nations are off the mark. Been to the south lately? Majority of the population in southern states act the Civil War just ended yesterday, with much of the population still sulking about their change of fortune. For you to blame the Indians for living in the past is difficult to digest. Imagine Caroline Miniscule lost 90% of her own family due to foreign disease such as small pox, then the remaining 10% were pushed across the United States from their existing homes, hunted down like wild animals...and then driven to the most desolate, poor soiled counties in the United States, forced by the invaders to learn the invaders new language, plodded with their new poisons to keep them sedated, stripped of your family history, clothing, foods (which cannot be found in these parts of the country) and way of life. They were killed with the white man's vises. Now leave your family isolated on desolate tracts of lands, without any education or employment opportunities in this new White Man's world ou were thrust into. You'd and your grandkids would all be hitting the bottle pretty hard. I hope folks that treat you in your elder years show you as much compassion as you did to our native Americans.
Posted by T Henley on May 22,2011 | 08:22 AM
The desperately poor - and 70% alcoholic - Lakota have $500 million waiting for them. Sure, the Black Hills aren't "for sale." They're already gone. The Indian's way of life is gone, and all they've done for 70 years - with white man's help, of course [put anyone on the government teat, and that's where they'll stay, regardless of race, creed or color] is live in poverty and descend into alcholism. [Don't take my word for it, read the statistics on reservations yourselves.]
Surely what they should do is take that $500 million and make a better life for themselves. Instead of living and sulking about the past, create a better future for themselves and their children. Build schools that will teach the story of the Black Hills as the tragedy that it was, on top of which Native Americans have built a powerful new future.
As it is, the nearest future for most of them is a drunk tank.... a sad legacy for a once proud people. Their ancestors would be ashamed of them.
Posted by Caroline Miniscule on July 8,2010 | 12:19 PM
Ihave a photo by Lincoln Borglum showing the orogortions of Mt. Rushmore, and post card photos by Stevens phot. One shows Mt. Rushmore just before the work began, and another showing the mt. with just the carving of Washington completed.
Posted by Betty Eilts on July 5,2010 | 03:20 PM
The local guide that led Gutzon Borglum to the site for the carving of Mount Rushmore was Theodore Shoemaker. Born in PA in 1874, his family moved west thru Iowa and on to the Black Hills in 1886. He was serving as sheriff of Custer County in 1918 when he resigned to become South Dakota's State Forester, a position he held for 14 years. It was during that time that he guided Borglum to the site for the carving of the world-famed Mount Rushmore. An interesting footnote; Mr. Shoemaker was also one of 60 cowboys in Captain Seth Bullock's Cowboy Brigade that rode their horses in the inaugural parade to honor Teddy Roosevelt in Washington DC in March of 1905.
Posted by Carl Steiger on June 20,2010 | 10:18 PM
Ii was looking for a mystery person for school and while reading the comments I found the answer!
Posted by on November 4,2008 | 04:03 PM
With regard to the Mount Rushmore article. it's too bad the only photos in this article are not those of Mount Rushmore but of Crazy Horse Memorial. I hope some photos of Mount Rushmore are posted in future articles.
Posted by B Nedved on April 28,2008 | 01:58 PM
The Mount Rushmore pictures that i have seen so far looks nice.I want to go see the statues one day.
Posted by my name is kierra la'shun smith on March 4,2008 | 11:55 AM
I kind of sped through the information and was left wondering why lincoln borglum stopped construction when he did
Posted by bob davitt on December 17,2007 | 06:12 PM