Mout Rushmore America Wonders, Attraction Mount Rushmore , Mount Rushmore Guide, Mount Rushmore America Tourist Guide
 
Wonders America man made wonder & attraction guide Asia America natural wonder & attraction guide America America man made wonder & attraction guide Africa America natural wonder & attraction guide Europe America wonder & attraction guide Ocenia America wonder & attraction guide  
 
  Top Wonders   Mount Rushmore Near By
Statue of Liberty
Mount Rushmore Brooklyn Bridge
Mount Rushmore Empire State Building
Mount Rushmore Mount Rushmore
Hoover Dam
Grand Canyon
Mount McKinley
Great Smoky Mountain National Park
Chaco Culture
Mount Rushmore
Mount Rushmore
 
Mount Rushmore Mount Rushmore

Mt. Rushmore stands as a shrine of democracy, a monument and memorial to this country's birth, growth and ideals. Mount Rushmore symbolizes the greatness of this nation through the greatness of it leaders. The epic sculpture of Mount Rushmore depicts the faces of four exalted American presidents that symbolize this nations rich history, rugged determination and lasting achievements.

Carved into the southeast face of a mountain in South Dakota are the faces of four presidents, a memorial to American history. The faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln look down from their stoney heights and remind everyone that even the impossible is possible.

 
Mount Rushmore
Mount Rushmore

Mount RushmoreGeorge Washington, Father of the Nation

Gutzon Borglum, being very patriotic, was convince that a monument to the presidents would be better than a monument for western heroes. He also felt that it would draw more visitors.
On his first trip to South Dakota he had made a few sketches of ideas which he thought would represent the founding fathers and preservers of this nation. Those who said, "Man has a right to be free and to be happy." Therefore, he continued to work on ideas similar to his early sketches.
The first choice had to be George Washington, the commander in chief of the American army and the founding father who had led the nation in its fight for independence.

Abraham Lincoln, Preserver of the Union

Lincoln was the man who kept the country together during the Civil War.
The choice of Abraham Lincoln as one of the presidents was an easy one for Gutzon Borglum. He had always loved Lincoln and had done several sculptures of him in the past. One was a marble bust of Lincoln for the Capitol in Washington, D.C. In fact in 1908 Robert Lincoln said it was, "the most extraordinarily good portrait of my father I have ever seen."
Also, in 1911 Borglum carved a huge statue of Lincoln for the courthouse in Newark, New Jersey. Children have always like to climb on it so it has become known as the "Children's Lincoln."

Thomas Jefferson, the Expansionist

The third choice as part of the Memorial was Thomas Jefferson who, as a skilled writer, was the author of the Declaration of Independence which has enkindle a search for freedom for many other nations.
In 1803 it was Thomas Jefferson who, through his wisdom, secured the Louisiana Territory from France. Napoleon needed money for a war with Britain and sold this land for $15 million. This amounted to 3 cents per acre. Known now as the "Louisiana Purchase," this was to open expansion to the West. This area consisted of what is now part of Louisiana, Arkansas, Iowa, North and South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana.
This led to the exploration of the West by Lewis and Clark.

Theodore Roosevelt, Protector of the Working Man

After Borglum had worked on a model with three presidents and completed measurements on the mountain, it was decided that there was room for one more president.
Many thought that Roosevelt was too recent to be selected as one of the Presidents and that his presidency had not had the test of time. But like Jefferson, he had contributed to the expansion to the West by his construction of the Panama Canal which opened a much quicker route to the West.
At this time President Calvin Coolidge had selected the State Game Lodge in South Dakota's Custer State Park to be his summer White House and he became interested in the project.
Lincoln Borglum said, "...it was Coolidge who added the decisive reason for the the inclusion of Theodore Roosevelt upon the mountain (a subject on which he was most adamant). I heard him say that Roosevelt was the first president who had actively worked to protect the rights of the working man."
(It was through the help of President Coolidge that federal funding was obtained to speed up the work on Mount Rushmore.)

Mount Rushmore
 
Mount Rushmore Facts

  • Sculptor Gutzon Borglum began drilling into the 5,725-foot mountain in 1927, at the age of 60.
  • Creation of the Shrine of Democracy took 14 years and cost a mere $1 million.
  • Rushmore's granite faces tower 5,500 feet above sea level.
  • The carvings on Mount Rushmore are scaled to men who would stand 465 feet tall.
  • Each head on Mt. Rushmore is as tall as a six-story building.
  • More that 800 million pounds of stone were removed from Mount Rushmore while carving the presidents.
  • Each president's face is as tall as the entire Great Sphinx of Egypt, measuring 60 feet from the chin to the top of the head.
  • The president's noses are 20 feet long, each mouth 18 feet wide and the eyes are 11 feet across.
  • The workers had to climb 506 steps daily to get to the top of Mount Rushmore.
 
Mount Rushmore
Mount Rushmore
HIstory of Mount Rushmore

Early Stage : While working at Stone Mountain in Georgia, Gutzon Borglum had developed what he called the "Pointing Machine." His models in his studio at the bottom of the mountain were carved so that one inch on the model represented one foot on the mountain. Therefore a 60 inch high face on the model would be 60 feet on the mountain.

On the top of the models was what looked like a large protractor and a beam which could be moved around the protractor to different angles where a measurement could be made for the distance out and down to a point on the model.

On each head on the mountain there was a similar protractor and a long beam. They would then duplicate the same angle, distance out, and distance down, and sometimes the distance back to a point on the surface of the granite. Each measurement would be 12 times the size of the measurement on the model. This could be done with accuracies to within a quarter of an inch of tolerance.

Construction :
In the early stages of construction the workers had to climb a 760 step stairway to get to the top. The workers were then suspended by 300 foot long 3/8th inch steel cables in "bosun chairs" which were similar to the harnesses used on horses for pulling wagons. The workers, who were mostly miners from the area, would use jackhammers and drills run by an 1,800 foot line from compressors at the base of the mountain.

Most of the supplies, drill steel, and dynamite were carried to the top of the mountain by a mine bucket on a steel cable tram. The steel drills would drill about 18 inches and then would be sent back down to a blacksmith shop at the bottom of the mountain where they would resharpened. Many days up to 400 drill would be used.

Art :- The stone at the surface which has been expose to the weather and freezing and cracking was too soft to be carved and needed to be remove to get to the hard stone for the final carving. Twenty feet of stone was removed to get to Washington's chin while 80 feet of stone was removed to get to Lincoln's head and 120 feet to Roosevelt's head. Large fissures cutting from the left across the mountain and down to the right determined the final location of the heads. The final location of the heads was determined after most of the excess rock was removed.

About 500,000 tons of rock was removed from the mountain with dynamite. Gutzon Borglum had perfected the use of dynamite while he was working on Stone Mountain in Georgia. He said, "two considerations to be borne constantly in mind - split off just what you want to remove and no more, and second, under no conditions so charge your load as to injure the stone left in place."

Finishing:When it came time to do the finish work, heavy timbers and scaffolding in eight foot stories were bolted to six inch projection which were left on the granite surface for this purpose. In the winter they were covered with canvas and heaters were built from oil drums for burning wood to keep them warm.

Usually the final six inches would be removed with pneumatic tools by drilling holes downward as close together as possible. The webs between the holes were then knocked out. Then smaller holes were drilled close together and the stone was then removed with hammers an chisels.

The scaffolding was removed for the final stages and the men worked in small cages that were three by four feet for one man or three by eight feet for two men. The cages were hung from the cables and the winch at the top that had once been used for the swing chairs. The cages gave them a better platform for doing the finishing work.

 
Getting There

PLANE - Rapid City Regional Airport: 35 miles from memorial in Rapid City, SD.
CAR - Visitors traveling on I-90 should exit at Rapid City and follow Highway 16 southwest to Keystone and then Highway 244 to Mount Rushmore. Visitors coming from the south should follow Highway 385 north to Highway 244, which is the road leading to the memorial.
PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION - Rental cars or private tour companies can bring visitors to the memorial from Rapid City, SD. Personal vehicles are the most common form of transportation. No public transportation options exist.

 
Mount Rushmore
Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites Keystone 321 Swanzey Street, Keystone, SD 57751, United States (605) 666-4925
The Roosevelt Inn 206 Old Cemetery Road, Keystone, SD 57751-0709, United States (605) 666-4599
Travelodge Keystone 522 S Hwy 16A, Keystone, SD 57751, United States (605) 666-4638
White House Resort Keystone 115 Swanzey Street, Keystone, SD 57751, United States (877) 747-8713
Dee'zz Inn 436 Old Hill City Road, Keystone, SD 57751, United States (605) 666-4854
Ruby House Restaurant Winter Street, Keystone, SD 57751, United States (605) 666-4404
Millstone Family Restaurant 2010 West Main Street, Rapid City, SD 57702-2408, United States (605) 343-5824
Golden Phoenix 2421 West Main Street, Rapid City, SD 57702-2421, United States(605) 348-4195
Railhead Family Restaurant 115 Swanzey Street, Keystone, SD 57751, United States(605) 666-5210
Mt Rushmore National Memorial SD Hwy 244, Keystone, SD 57751, United States(605) 574-2515
Storybook Island 1301 Sheridan Lake Road, Rapid City, SD 57702-3462, United States(605) 342-6357
Reptile Gardens 8955 South Highway 16, Rapid City, SD 57702, United States(605) 342-5873
Dinosaur Park 2915 Canyon Lake Drive, Rapid City, SD 57702-3453, United States(605) 343-8687
Cosmos Mystery Area 24040 Cosmos Road, Rapid City, SD 57702-7414, United States(605) 343-9802
 
© All contents Copyright (c) 2007, WorldsBestWonders. All rights reserved.
Disclaimer: We've tried to make the information on this web site as accurate as possible, but it is provided 'as is' and we accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by anyone resulting from this information. You should verify critical information (like visas, health and safety, customs and transportation) with the relevant authorities before you travel.