Sculptor Gutzon Borglum (left) directs drillers suspended by cables from the top of the mountain as they work on the head of President George Washington at the Mount Rushmore Memorial in the Black Hills area near Keystone, South Dakota, on July 22, 1929. In October, the memorial that through the years has become the state’s most famous attraction and draws about 3 million visitors a year will mark 75 years since it was completed. (AP Photo/File)

Sculptor Gutzon Borglum (left) directs drillers suspended by cables from the top of the mountain as they work on the head of President George Washington at the Mount Rushmore Memorial in the Black Hills area near Keystone, South Dakota, on July 22, 1929. In October, the memorial that through the years has become the state’s most famous attraction and draws about 3 million visitors a year will mark 75 years since it was completed. (AP Photo/File)

75 years of Mount Rushmore, a boon for tourism, creativity

By Regina Garcia Cano

Associated Press

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — It was a historian’s idea: carve gigantic sculptures into the granite pinnacles of the Black Hills of South Dakota, significant Western figures like Lewis and Clark, Buffalo Bill Cody, Fremont, Red Cloud and Sacagawea.

“In the vicinity of Harney Peak … are opportunities for heroic sculpture of unusual character,” South Dakota Department of History Superintendent Doane Robinson wrote to a sculptor in Georgia in 1924.

The sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, redefined the project entirely. Using jackhammers and dynamite, he began in 1927, first sculpting President George Washington, then Thomas Jefferson, followed by Abraham Lincoln and finally Theodore Roosevelt.

Next month, Mount Rushmore National Memorial marks 75 years of public pervasiveness, ending up in movies and comics and on quarter-dollar coins.

“Burglum told Robinson ‘You are not thinking big enough. Western figures? That’s not going to attract enough people. You need to think bigger,’” said Maureen McGee-Ballinger, the memorial’s chief of interpretation and education.

Robinson was looking for ways to promote the state, particularly the Black Hills, McGee-Ballinger said. Plan B surely has served that purpose, with about 3 million people visiting every year.

“For the state, and the nation, Mount Rushmore is quite iconic,” South Dakota State Historical Society Director Jay Vogt said. “It definitely put South Dakota on the map as a destination … Because these are elected individuals on the mountain, who worked hard to preserve a nation whose creation was unique in and of itself, it really speaks to the idea that we are a country of free people.”

Along the way, it has also found a place in pop culture. A chase scene in “North by Northwest,” Alfred Hitchcock’s 1959 classic starring Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint, included a death-defying scramble over the presidents’ faces.

“Alfred Hitchcock says he expects to realize his long ambition — filming a chase over the Mt. Rushmore Monument,” The Associated Press reported in 1958. “He may be spoofing, but you never can tell with Hitchcock.” Some scenes were filmed at the memorial, but the climbing of the faces were studio shots that used models of the mountain.

A 1983 special anniversary issue of the comic “Wonder Woman” features her face next to the stone Lincoln. T-shirts with the faces of superheroes instead of the presidents are available at Target and elsewhere. The memorial is a never-ending muse for political cartoonists, and in 2016, there’s been no shortage of memes.

The memorial has also been featured in multiple coins, including a quarter issued by the U.S. Mint in 2013 that shows men adding the finishing details to Jefferson’s face. The four faces have also been highlighted in postage stamps, and they are — of course — in the background of South Dakota’s license plates.

To celebrate the milestone, the National Park Service held events during the summer in connection with its own 100th birthday.

The memorial should be lauded for several reasons, according to Debbie Ketel Speas, communications director for the nonprofit Mount Rushmore Society, especially its impact on the state’s tourism industry and economic development, as well as the efforts of those who worked to make it a reality.

“When you look at what they achieved over 75 years ago, it’s quite spectacular,” she said.

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