The Making of Mount
Rushmore
The 70th anniversary of the completion of the South Dakota monument
prompts a look back at what it took to create it
From the
Smithsonian.com
Finding a Sculptor
In the 1920s, despite
the area’s atrocious roads, a fair number of adventurous travelers were
visiting South Dakota’s Black Hills. But Doane Robinson, the official historian
for the state, had an idea to lure more tourists to the pine-covered mountain
range that rises from the plains, taking to its rather atrocious roads. But
Robinson wanted to entice more visitors to South Dakota, which had been named a
state 30 years prior.
“Tourists
soon get fed up on scenery unless it has something of special interest connected
with it to make it impressive,” he said. He envisioned heroes of the American
West—Red Cloud, Lewis and Clark, Buffalo Bill Cody, among others—carved into
the granite “needles,” named for their pointy appearance, near Harney Peak, the
state’s tallest mountain.
In
August 1924, Robinson wrote to Gutzon Borglum, an ambitious sculptor who was
already carving on a granite cliff face in Georgia. “He knew that Borglum would
have the skills and knowledge to get something like this done,” says Amy
Bracewell, park historian at Mount Rushmore.
Borglum,
a son of Danish immigrants, was born in Idaho, spent his childhood in Nebraska
and later studied art in California, Paris (with Auguste Rodin) and London.
After returning to the United States, Borglum entered a gold-medal-winning
sculpture into the St. Louis World’s Fair in 1904. He sculpted figures inside
the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City and a head of Lincoln
that was prominently displayed by Theodore Roosevelt in the White House and,
for many years, in the Capitol Rotunda. But when Robinson wrote to Borglum he
was working on his largest project yet—a bas-relief of Confederate leaders on
Stone Mountain in Georgia.
Borglum
had managed to work out the technical difficulties of working on a sheer face
of a mountain, in a massive scale, and was well into carving a figure of Robert
E. Lee, when Robinson approached him about the assignment out West. At the
time, tension was rising between Borglum and the Stone Mountain Monumental
Association because while the sculptor sought to carve a whole army into the
cliff, the association only had the funds for the frieze’s centerpiece of Lee,
Stonewall Jackson, Jefferson Davis and possibly a few other mounted generals.
In
September 1924, just five months before the association fired him, Borglum made
his first trip to South Dakota. He was eager to start anew in the Black Hills.
“I want the vindication it would give me,” he told Robinson.
Selecting the Mountain
When Borglum was in
South Dakota, Robinson took him to see the “needles.” But the sculptor felt
that the granite spires were too spindly to carve. Even if he could feasibly do
it, Borglum told Robinson, “Figures on those granite spikes would only look
like misplaced totem poles. We will have to look farther.”
A
year later, in 1925, Borglum scouted the area surrounding Harney Peak for a
mountain or piece of granite that was solid enough to hold a figure. “As an
artist, he was very interested in light and making sure that the morning
sunrise hit the face of the granite,” says Bracewell. A state forester led
Borglum on horseback to three mountains he thought would be appropriate—Old
Baldy, Sugarloaf and finally Mount Rushmore.
From
all accounts, it seems that Borglum fell for Mount Rushmore at first sight. Its
400-foot high and 500-foot wide east-facing wall would serve as the perfect
carving block, according to the sculptor. Hours after he laid eyes on it,
Borglum told the Rapid City Journal that there was “no piece of granite
comparable to it in the United States.”
The
following day, Borglum and a few others climbed Mount Rushmore, named after
Charles Rushmore, an attorney who assessed mining claims in the area in the
1880s. Some members of the press and officials in Rapid City, the nearest
population center about 25 miles northeast, were disappointed with Borglum’s
selection, since it was in such a remote, roadless area of the state. But
geologists approved. “They assured the sculptor that the ancient granite was
extremely hard, and incredibly durable, and that the fissures were probably
only skin deep,” wrote Gutzon’s son Lincoln Borglum and June Culp Zeitner in
the 1976 book Borglum’s Unfinished Dream: Mount Rushmore.
Borglum’s Vision
Once Borglum saw the
impressive mountain he had to work with, he started to rethink Robinson’s idea
of featuring Western figures. It might be too regional, he thought, and he
wanted the monument to be national in scope. “I want to create a monument so
inspiring that people from all over America will be drawn to come and look and
go home better citizens,” said Borglum, in 1927.
As
the sculptor, Borglum, with Robinson’s support, had the artistic freedom to
carve what he saw fit. He wanted Mount Rushmore to represent the first 150
years of the nation’s history, and so decided to carve portraits of four key
presidents into the granite.
“Washington
represents the foundation of the country, the creation of the United States.
Jefferson reflects the expansion of the country with the Louisiana Purchase,
doubling the country in size and seeing that vision of what the country could
be; Lincoln, the preservation of the country through the Civil War; and
Roosevelt, the development of the country as a world power leading up into the
20th century,” says Bracewell.
As Rex Alan Smith writes
in The Carving of Mount Rushmore, Borglum “thought big and dreamed big
and talked big.” So, it was no surprise that he wanted the heads of the four
presidents on Mount Rushmore to be big. Each visage is six stories tall. Had it
not been for a band of impenetrable mica schist lower in the mountain, and time
restraints, Borglum and his crew of carvers would have hewn down to the
presidents’ waists. The wide-eyed sculptor had also envisioned an entablature
120 feet high and 80 feet wide, in the shape of the Louisiana Purchase, to the
right of the presidents, on which a brief history of the United States would be
etched. He even launched a contest, calling for Americans to submit
inscriptions. He planned for a grand staircase, built from the rubble blasted
from the mountain, to climb from the base to a Hall of Records, positioned
behind the presidents’ heads. A cavernous rotunda, the hall would hold the
Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, information about the four
presidents, a record of American history and an explanation for why Mount
Rushmore was built.
Borglum
was of the mindset that American art should be “…built into, cut into, the
crust of this earth so that those records would have to melt or by wind be worn
to dust before the record…could, as Lincoln said, ‘perish from the earth.’”
When he carved his presidential portraits into the stable granite of Mount
Rushmore, he fully intended for the memorial to endure, like Stonehenge, long
past people’s understanding of it.
The Carving Process
Mount Rushmore was part
of federal land, and with the help of Robinson and other heavyweight
supporters, including Rapid City mayor John Boland, South Dakota Congressman
William Williamson and Senator Peter Norbeck, Borglum was able to get the
mountain set aside for his project. The actual carving, funded at first by
individuals and community organizations, began in 1927.
At
Congressman Williamson’s urging, President Coolidge spent the summer of 1927 in
the Black Hills. Impressed by Borglum’s vision, he invited the sculptor back to
Washington, D.C., to discuss federal funding. By 1929, the Mount Rushmore bill
was passed, ensuring that the government would provide up to $250,000, or half
of the estimated cost of the memorial, by matching private donations. Over the
14 years spent constructing the memorial, funding was always an issue. In the
end, the project cost nearly $1 million, about 85 percent of which came,
according to Bracewell, from federal funds.
About
30 men at any given time, and 400 in total, worked on the monument, in a
variety of capacities. Blacksmiths forged tools and drill bits. Tramway
operators oversaw the shuttling of equipment from the base of the mountain to
the work zone. There were drillers and carvers strapped into bosun chairs, and
men who, by hand, worked the winches that lowered them. Call boys, positioned
to see both the skilled laborers and the winch houses barked instructions to
the winch operators. And, powder men cut sticks of dynamite to certain lengths
and placed them in holes to blast out sections of the granite.
Ninety
percent of the mountain was carved using dynamite. “The workers were so
skilled, knowing how much dynamite you needed to use to blast off rock, that
they were able to get within about three to five inches of the final faces,”
says Bracewell.
Borglum
had used a massive projector at night to cast his image of Confederate leaders
onto Stone Mountain; his assistant traced the shape with white paint. But at
Mount Rushmore, Borglum mounted a flat-panel protractor on each of the
presidents’ heads with a large boom and a plumb bomb dangling from the boom. He
had a similar device on a model. “His crew took thousands of measurements on
the model and then went up to the mountain and translated it times 12 to
recreate those measurements on the mountain,” says Bracewell. In red paint,
they marked off certain facial features, what needed to be carved and how deep.
To remove the remaining three to five inches of granite, the carvers used a
honeycomb method. They pounded small holes into the stone using jackhammers and
with a hammer and chisel broke off the honeycomb pieces. “They would just kind
of pop off because the holes were close together,” says Bracewell. Then, the
crew used a bumper tool with a rotating, multi-diamond drill bit head to buff
the presidents’ skin smooth. When all was said and done, 800 million pounds of
rock had been removed.
The
process was amazingly successful, given the complexity of the task. No one died
in the making of the monument. But the workers certainly hit some snags along
the way. Thomas Jefferson was meant to be to the left of George Washington, but
when the crew started carving there, they realized the rock on that side was
not well suited. They blasted him off and put him to the right of Washington instead.
The shift ended up moving Abraham Lincoln’s head into the area intended for the
entablature, which was never added. Similarly, to find solid rock from which to
carve Theodore Roosevelt, the workers had to plunge 80 feet back from the
original face of the mountain.
Gutzon
Borglum’s death, at age 73, on March 6, 1941, was the beginning of the end for
the making of the monument. His son Lincoln took over in leading the project.
But as the United States prepared for World War II, and federal funds were needed
elsewhere, Congress shut down the construction of Mount Rushmore and declared
the monument complete, as is, on October 31, 1941.
Controversy at the Memorial
That year, nearly
400,000 people visited Borglum’s “shrine of democracy.” To put that success in
perspective, according to National Park Service records, that same year around
the same number visited the Grand Canyon and the Statue of Liberty.
Yet,
for all its admirers, Mount Rushmore had, and continues to have, its critics.
When Robinson first spoke in the 1920s of carving into the Black Hills,
environmentalists were outraged. Why, they thought, did men have to mar the
natural beauty of a mountain? Perhaps the strongest opposition has come from
American Indians. Many local Lakota see Mount Rushmore as a desecration of
their sacred homeland. To add insult to injury, the carving, of four white men,
is a reminder of the affliction the Lakota faced.
The
Treaty of Fort Laramie, hashed out between the United States and the Lakota in
1868, declared the Black Hills to be Lakota land. But, in the 1870s, at the
behest of President Ulysses S. Grant, a small army led by Lt. Col. George
Armstrong Custer occupied the region. Gold was struck, and a rush of
panhandlers began to illegally settle the area. The Great Sioux War erupted in
1876, and by 1877, an act of Congress forced the defeated Lakota to surrender
their land.
In
the 1930s, Lakota Chief Henry Standing Bear took one stance. He hired a
sculptor by the name of Korczak Ziolkowski to carve the face of Crazy Horse,
the legendary Lakota leader, in a cliff just 15 miles away. Wrapped in its own
controversy, the construction of the Crazy Horse Memorial, which eclipses Mount
Rushmore in size, continues to this day. The memorial has refused government
grants and is funded by visitors and private donors.
Meanwhile,
Gerard Baker, Mount Rushmore’s first American Indian superintendent, from 2004
to 2010, took another. Under his leadership, park rangers began to include the
Lakota perspective in the telling of Mount Rushmore’s history. “There will
probably always be the ongoing debate of the desecration of the ancestral
homeland for the American Indians,” says Bracewell. “But we hope that with
conversations, and by openly acknowledging and talking about it, we can help
heal the divide a little bit.”
Mount Rushmore Today and into the Future
At its going rate, Mount
Rushmore erodes only one inch every 10,000 years. Borglum was the work’s
sculptor and its first conservator. He and his crew sealed natural cracks in
the mountain with a mixture of linseed oil and granite dust. Today, a repair
crew on staff at Mount Rushmore patches cracks with a silicone-based caulking
material on an annual basis.
Should
a manmade or natural disaster ever significantly damage the monument, the park
has a 3-D digital scan of the entire mountain, within centimeter accuracy of
details, which could be used to recreate it. The data was collected during a
two-week laser-scanning project the park administered in 2010, with help from
specialists from the Kacyra Family Foundation and Historic Scotland, an agency
of the Scottish government charged with protecting historic sites. “The sky is
the limit on what kind of visitor programming we can do with this data,” says
Bracewell. Soon, the memorial will be able to create virtual fly-bys and trips
to the unfinished hall of records and the top of the mountain. Over two million
tourists visit Mount Rushmore every year, but, with new tools, such as
holographic images for use in classrooms, the National Park Service will be
able to share the experience of the memorial with many more.
Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-making-of-mount-rushmore-121886182/#WczjGLg9FHrK7tvD.99
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