Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of Mount Rushmore National Memorial, hoped that ten thousand years from now, when archaeologists came upon the four sixty-foot presidential heads carved in the Black Hills of South Dakota, they would have a clear and graphic understanding of American civilization. Borglum, the child of Mormon polygamists, had an almost Ahab-like obsession with Colossalism--a scale that matched his ego and the era. He learned how to be a celebrity from Auguste Rodin; how to be a political bully from Teddy Roosevelt. He ran with the Ku Klux Klan and mingled with the rich and famous from Wall Street to Washington. Mount Rushmore was to be his crowning achievement, the newest wonder of the world, the greatest piece of public art since Phidias carved the Parthenon. But like so many episodes in the saga of the American West, what began as a personal dream had to be bailed out by the federal government, a compromise that nearly drove Borglum mad. Nor in the end could he control how his masterpiece would be received. Nor its devastating impact on the Lakota Sioux and the remote Black Hills of South Dakota. Great White Fathers is at once the biography of a man and the biography of a place, told through travelogue, interviews, and investigation of the unusual records that one odd American visionary left behind. It proves that the best American stories are not simple; they are complex and contradictory, at times humorous, at other times tragic.
Red Men Calling on the Great White Father
"Told with deep understanding and clarity, the stories of the meeting of these Indians with presidents produce sympathy for the dispossessed red men and a feeling of the injustice of...
The first book to tell the complete story of Rushmore. "I had seen the photographs and the drawings of this great work.
The awesome, untold adventure of one couple's harrowing, heroic effort to save several hundred ice-bound whalers-- and the future of the Eskimo people
Dead White Guys is also a timely defense of the great books, arriving in the middle of a national debate about the fate of these books in high schools and universities around the country.
African Recruits and Missionary Conscripts: The White Fathers and the Great War (1914-1922)
This Vision book for youth 9 - 15 years old tells the thrilling story of one of America's greatest missionaries who came down from Canada with explorer Louis Joliet to explore the mighty Mississippi River, the "great river" bordered by ...
... Great White Fathers, 54–56, 154–63. 20. Borglum is quoted in Smith, Carving of Mount Rushmore, 76. 21. Carter, Gutzon Borglum, 79. 22. Borglum is quoted in Fite, Mount Rushmore, 48. 23. Larner, Mount Rushmore, 194–238, delineates ...
In this book, he not only writes of his ordeal, but also delves into shark behavior, and explains his desire to spread shark awareness. There is also an underlying theme of tremendous familial love and Kathrein’s extreme fervor for life.
A detailed study that ends in 1920 and stresses a radical change in policy after 1900 is Frederick E. Hoxie , “ Beyond ... Mid - America 59 ( January 1977 ) : 51-64 , and Kenneth O'Reilly , " Progressive Era and New Era American Indian ...