
Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson,
Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt always seemed a little larger than life
to me when I read my American history books as a child. Staring up into their
stone faces at Mount Rushmore certainly reinforced that feeling for me.
Tributes abound for some of our best-loved
presidents, especially with celebration of the bicentennial of Abraham
Lincoln’s birth. But one of the most impressive presidential tributes still has
to Mount Rushmore, where the massive visages of Lincoln, Washington, Jefferson
and Roosevelt stand impassively immortalized high on a South Dakota mountain
face.
I generally seek out some of the more obscure
attractions when I visit an area, but Mount Rushmore is one of those typically
touristy sites that seem to command your attention.
The four 60-foot high faces, carved 500 feet up into
the mountain present a solemn presence seen for miles around, as drivers
approach the site along roads winding through South Dakota’s beautiful Black
Hills region.
Peter Norbeck, who as the state’s governor
spearheaded blasting the Needles Highway through Custer State Park in 1919,
became the moving force behind the monumental task of creating Mount Rushmore.
Serving as a U.S. Senator from South Dakota during the 1920s, Norbeck helped
raise nearly one million dollars for the Mount Rushmore project.

Organizers selected artist Gutzon Borglum to create
the project. Borglum’s work carving the likeness of Robert E. Lee with a row of
Confederate soldiers into Stone Mountain in Georgia gave him some valuable expertise
with mountainside carving as he began work on Mount Rushmore.
Cost overruns, Native American belief in the
sacredness of the Black Hills, and Borglum’s eccentricities and temperamental
personality led to conflicts as the project dragged into the Great Depression
years of the 1930s.
Borglum did play an active part in suggesting
subjects for Mount Rushmore, which historian Doane Robinson conceived as an
especially impressive tourist attraction to retain the interest of visitors
once they’d seen the Black Hills. Borglum suggested focusing on some of the
nation’s most popular presidents in order to generate national interest in the
project.
Selection of the four presidents to include in the
carving gave it the overlaying storyline of the country’s expansion. Washington
as the first president, Lincoln and preservation of the Union, Jefferson and
the Louisiana Purchase and Roosevelt’s acquisition of the Panama Canal.

In spite of it all, the project started in 1927 saw
its completion in 1941. A Web site for the Public Broadcasting Service
documentary about the project contains a few fascinating film clips of Borglum and
some of his hundreds of workers working on the carving.
Today, entering the majestic site along the Avenue
of Flags honoring 56 states and territories gives no hint of the difficult road
traveled to create Rushmore.
The best photo taking opportunities may be along the half-mile Presidential Trail, which takes visitors closer to the mountain and many great vantage points looking up into the larger-than-life panel of presidents.
© Dominique King 2009
Beautiful!!! Thanks for sharing. This year I will visit Mount Rushmore, for sure.
Posted by: auria cortes | February 12, 2009 at 06:56 AM
Auria-Thanks for stopping by! I was surprised at how much I enjoyed my visit to Mount Rushmore. The day was perfect for taking photos, and the walk along the Presidential Trail was especially nice because of the great photo angles it offered.
Posted by: Dominique | February 13, 2009 at 06:26 PM