Posted on 05/29/2005 9:55:58 AM PDT by SmithL
CUSTER, S.D. - Nearly six decades have passed since work began on the Crazy Horse Memorial, a granite mountain being carved into a colossal sculpture of the Sioux warrior, arm outstretched toward his ancestral homeland, astride a stallion more than two football fields long.
When it's finished - and no one is predicting when that will be - the sculpture will be 563 feet high and 641 feet long. It will be taller than the Washington Monument, and so large that the four presidential heads on Mount Rushmore, 17 miles away, would fit inside the nine-story-high warrior's head.
But with $17 million spent so far, raised largely from visitors and others familiar with the project, only a portion of the monument is finished. Now, for the first time, a national fundraising drive is being quietly started in hopes of accelerating the pace.
The monument was suggested in 1939 by Sioux Chief Henry Standing Bear, who asked Boston-born sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski to do the work. Ziolkowski, an acclaimed sculptor from Boston, had worked briefly at Mount Rushmore but didn't get along with chief sculptor Gutzon Borglum.
After considering the project for years, Ziolkowski began sculpting the mountain on June 3, 1948. He doggedly pursued it for the rest of his life, rejecting federal money and other government help.
"Korczak always believed that if it were done by government, it would never be finished the way it should be," explained development director Fred Tully.
Ziolkowski died in 1982, but his widow, Ruth, and seven of their 10 children have continued the labor of love.
So far, the family has dynamited, chiseled and scraped more than 8 million tons of rock from the mountain.
Crazy Horse's face was finished in time for the 50th anniversary of the project in 1998, shifting the focus to the 22-story-tall horse's head. An additional 4 million tons of granite must be removed to complete the project.
Ruth Ziolkowski, 78, still is actively involved and has no intention of retiring.
Visitors frequently ask when the sculpture will be done. Her stock answer: "We don't honestly know."
Some view the sculpture with facetious humor: "Be back in 100 years to see it completed," a Canadian tourist wrote in the Crazy Horse guest book recently.
Others are more optimistic. "Big change since our 1974 visit. Keep it up," wrote a couple from Dover, Del.
Ironically, the memorial is just a few miles from the city of Custer, named for Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer. Crazy Horse and his Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors defeated Custer and his 7th Cavalry in the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn.
The $26.5 million fundraising campaign, aimed at foundations, corporations and individuals, will not be formally announced until next year, Tully said. He hopes to raise a large part of the money before then.
"If we start at zero before the official announcement, people will hold back and won't give because they're not sure if we're going to make it," he says. "If we can start with half or more than half of the money, people will want to get in on it."
While the sculpture is the focal point, educating visitors about American Indians and their culture is the memorial's true mission, Ruth Ziolkowski says.
The 1,000-acre complex includes an American Indian museum and cultural center, and Korczak Ziolkowski also envisioned a university and medical training center at the site. Those projects are still planned.
One new feature this year: a laser light show cataloguing American Indian contributions to society. The evening show turns the flank of the mountain into a 500-foot screen of colorful animations and still images.
ON THE NET
Memorial: http://www.crazyhorsememorial.org/
Ping.
According to the Indians themselves, it's more of not wanting anything to do with the government that took their land from them.
"I wish there was a graphic of the finsished outline superimposed over the existing rock. Anyonre ever see one?"
yep...it's out there...saw it years ago.
I was up there last April. Saw the same thing, just the face. New buildings and a $9.00 charge to get into the place.
Kind of disappointed.
Crazy Horse bump!
http://tomstores.com/6042.html
http://www.scissons.com/genealogy/bigman.html
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_042200_warriorsandw.htm
http://www.americanwest.com/pages/indians.htm
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/6524/americanindians.htm
Guess I am impatient, eh? LoL
No, it's a malt liquor.
"not wanting anything to do with the government that took their land,..."
It would seem that way on the surface.
An awesome book by Stephen Ambrose, "Crazy Horse and Custer: The Parallel Lives of Two American Warriors" indicates that the best of all possible strategies for defeating the Plains Indians was to force them off of their hunting grounds and into reservations, where they became dependent on the U.S. Government for food and care.
Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman - the same officer who led the march to Atlanta - originally strategized to defeat the Indians (and protect the railways) through crushing military force. The only problem with this plan was that the indians had no desire to go toe to toe with this superior military force. They wouldn't stand still long enough to be crushed by Sherman. Frustrated, he found that making the Indians dependent on our government, stripping them of their "warrior culture" and tribal customs was the most effective way to subdue them.
Does this recipe sound familiar to you!!!
Crazy Horse was an unwilling, yet pragmatic, statesman, a conflicted leader and an honorable warrior - an American warrior. Custer and Crazy Horse had many things in common, including a contempt for those who would simply abdicate their liberty for the largesse of a government program.
Accepting government money for this monument would be a mockery of Crazy Horse's legacy, while individual contributions towards a monument - that the man himself would almost certainly find a confusing and ridiculous spectacle - would probably be a fitting homage.
Personally, I was rooting for Custer!
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