I was struck by just how isolated it is, even today. When it was built it must have been quite the project to consider building in the middle of nowhere.
The Lakota Sioux named the granite formation that became Mount Rushmore "Six Grandfathers" (Tȟuŋkášila Šákpe), which symbolizes ancestral deities representing the six directions. The Black Hills, where Mount Rushmore is located, were a sacred place for the Lakota Sioux for centuries. They used the area for prayer, gathering food, and building materials. Some Sioux view Mount Rushmore as a symbol of land theft, as the government took their land to build the monument. Others praise the monument as a symbol of American democracy and freedom. What does it symbolize to you?
@@HobbyOrganistyou act like information in the 1880s travelled the same way it does today. Sure a guy across the world may have an idea. And a “common” practice of doing things. Doesn’t mean someone 10,000 miles away would have any idea.
@@austinpaxman503I used to think the same then a friend of mine who studied this said most things that last usually have the same technique through trial and error. He used the pyramids as an example saying they’re all over the world but no one knew about the other ones, bit they last coz it works, same with other buildings, bridges etc all the ones that don’t work get forgotten or damaged and the ones that do end up being similar. And don’t forget people actually travelled the world 100years ago so they could’ve got some ideas seeing other monuments
@@donaldkasper8346No. What was hard was black-lung disease. Alton Leach died of inhaling rock dust. As they all probably eventually died of. What are you talking about?
I never thought that deeply about how Mount Rushmore was carved out but honestly now that I know the impressive history and engineering behind it, I really wanna see it myself
Even the Roman statues of 200 BC already show that smart eye trick. It is not just workers that made those Rushmore statues !!! Designer Gutzon Borglum, a son of Danish immigrants is not just a random sculptor..he has studied at prestigious Paris art schools, worked in Spain and produced art for English queen Victoria before settling back in Utah.
I'm blown away that instead of figuring it out first then proceeding with the project, he proceeded with the project and figured out how to achieve it. Very inspirational, I have been to Mt. Rushmore and it is difficult to imagine the scope of the project and the commitment required to build it. Awesome! Thank you for posting this video.
I was talking to my friend from New York about a month ago and we were talking about how could someone build such a structure we had 3 way calls with older people no one knew . Thanks to TH-cam now we know I've sent this video to 15 of my friends who were curious just like I was this video is truly amazing . Thank you
@@Jsjsjjssjslazy white washed writing. Same reason they just glossed over the fact that it was carved into sacred stolen land of those who came before.
The murals in Pompeii were painted, also Egyption statues. But Greek and Roman statues were made from white marble. And contrary to the narrative the eyes already show that "smart" trick designed by Master Sculptor Gutzon Borglum, a Utah born son of Danish immigrants....
@@jamilsalim4454 Thanks to you and "@_fishy" I learned something new today. I've been to many European museums in Italy and Germany in the early 1960s but no one ever mentioned that the ancient statues had been painted. I went with tour guides both by myself & with my family. That was never mentioned. Hmmm? I guess that confirms that I'll never get too old to learn something new. That's a good thing.
@@thekeysman6760 Uhh... what? Are you implying theres some secret Mount Rushmore conspiracy? Anyways, yeah, it truly is amazing how nobody passed away during this, especially compared to some other projects, even today.
@@ambuttablow But they did pass away later from black lung disease due to breathing rock dust. What are you talking about? Try living in reality, not your 'mind'. And conspiracy means a secret plan to do something unlawful or harmful. So again, what _are_ you talking about? Just nonsense.
Just watched your video, and now I can't stop thinking about Mount Rushmore in a whole new way. The way you broke it down made me realize how crazy it must have been to create something that massive. It’s not just a monument anymore; it feels like these giant faces are staring back at us with untold stories. You really got me thinking about how much more there is to history than we actually know or see. Hoping that I can see that in person in USA.
Never actually been to mount rushmore (I live in europe) but it still fascinates me how it was built, the message it sends, and the lack of injury related to it.
My Husband, our Son, Daughter, & l had the privilege of visiting this amazing monument, years ago.....It was one our favorite adventures on a spring vacation. We enjoyed seeing this in person, and watching the film tutorial of its process. The experience, has remained etched in our memories, as a wonderful exoerience. We encourage any one, who has the opportunity, to visit this amazing sight( and if not possible, to, at least, watch this, docufilm, which shares so much about the amazing conception, planning, & brilliance of minds, enginuity, skill, & techniques, to create this monument)! We are ever still impressed! Thank you, for presenting and sharing this very informative docufilm on how this awesome monument came to be!
I've seen it depicted in countless movies and TV shows. I'm planning on doing a tour of the US at one point in the next few years. Mount Rushmore will definitely be a stop! I somehow always idolized the family trip to that place!
Idiot. It's a country in Africa and doesn't even say what your illiterate 'mind' thinks it says! 😂Educate yourself before you make a prat of yourself in public. 🤦♂️🕊️
The fact a monument frozen in time from a world war that is one of the largest monuments in the world created in somewhat modern times with such intricate engineering for the technology they had at the time. Representing some of americas greatest presidents. Yep I have no idea why anyone would find that interesting.
I remember visiting Mt. Rushmore as a child. It is quite impressive. Always interested in videos like this one that show more details about how it was actually created. I think the part about how the eyes were made is genius. Would love to return someday.
Our family visited Mount Rushmore when I was about 7 years old and was just as cool when I went back when I was 31 with my kids. Awesome to see they are still working on Crazy Horse that is nearby, too.
I've been teaching my grandson, James, about Mount Rushmore since he was 3 years old. He's 5 now, and I can't wait to show him this video. It's so well done, and he's going to love it. Thank you!
This is absolutely an engineering marvel, it is amazing that they could almost completely replicate a model on a scale twelve times larger and improvise on critical points where necessary.
Mount Rushmore is one of the most remarkable artistic achievements in human history. There has never been nor will there ever be anything like it, and the period from 1927 to 1941 was the ideal time for its creation. Gutzon Borglum was the perfect person to bring this vision to life. I have visited Mount Rushmore multiple times throughout my life, and it always takes my breath away.
I'm familiar with Mount Rushmore but I haven't ever looked at it in detail. This video was amazing because it only showed the final product at the end and it really made me appreciate the effort that Borglum and those men put into the project. Especially the eyes are so perfect
@@thekeysman6760 it showed the final product , read again please. Also, saying "so perfect" is a way of saying that something _subjectively_ looks so good it could be compared to perfection, adding a degree of expression. Example: "it came out so perfect I don't even want to touch it" is very different from "it came out perfect, I don't even want to touch it".
Having been there to see this absolute masterpiece was a bucket list item for me. It is incredible to see what a vision the artist had and his ability to overcome many obstacles in front of him gives hope for everyone
Thanks once again for expanding my knowledge, I knew nothing about mt.rushmore before this video, also shoutout to the animators/3d artists the animation and rendering is great!
I have a special affinity with South Dakota. Although our Scottish family settled in Canada in 1820, my grandfather, born in Ontario, set out for the US territories to farm for himself and became a US citizen. My father was born in 1895 near Webster. I was born in Toronto in 1949. It has only been in the last few years I have had the time to travel to see where the farm was located, imagine settlers' hardships, and visit some graves. I always wanted to see this monument and did so the same trip. Almost a surreal experience. I can't explain why I felt it was so small and so huge all at the same time! So glad I went.
The Black Hills (Paha Sapa) are sacred to the Lakota Sioux and other Indigenous tribes. According to the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, the U.S. government recognized the Black Hills as part of the Great Sioux Reservation. However, when gold was discovered in the area, the treaty was ignored, and the land was seized.Gutzon Borglum had ties to white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan.
Mount Rushmore is truly a marvel of engineering and art! The combination of explosives for large-scale work and meticulous hand carving for the finer details is mind-blowing.
You left out the part where Jefferson was going to be on the left but the rock was deemed too unstable and the blasted away two years worth of work on his face. They then moved him to the right side.
wooow, I am from Mexico and since I was a child I have been impressed with this piece of awsome endevour, I am 60 now and hopefully I will have a chance to visit in person this great, great work.
Absolutely blown away by the depth and engineering details in this video! Your research and passion bring Mount Rushmore to life, making it more than just a monument but a true marvel of human achievement. The way you explain the technical and historical aspects is mesmerizing. Thank you for transforming history into such an engaging experience! This giveaway would be an incredible bonus, but honestly, the knowledge I’ve gained is the real reward. Keep up the phenomenal work! Best of luck!
This was festinating. When I was in elementary school, my project state was South Dakota. I got to travel there as an adult and visited Mt. Rushmore and I got to fulfill a childhood dream. This video puts the icing on the cake.
what astonishes me is that nobody cares about dunadd hill in scotland! oh wait, it doesn't astonish me at all, because the religion and kingdom centered around it is completely dead! the only reason mt. rushmore's significance to natives is more important to you than the significance of dunadd hill is that dunadd was a white cultural thing erased by another white culture, while mt rushmore was a brown person cultural thing erased by evil white folks.
@GRMNCVS Too bad they lost it...we can do with it as we want. Also, sacred to who? The tribe that "stole" the land from another tribe, who "stole" it from another tribe, and on and on.
@@tedbow001 I tried to say the same thing. My comment was shadow deleted. Millions of bot comments get through every day, but comments about stuff like this are instantly banned. Shows you what our TH-cam overlords think about us.
So no one's going to talk about the fact that they carved those faces into Six Grandfathers, a sacred mountain in the Black Hills where Plains tribes like the Arapaho, Cheyenne, and Lakota Sioux prayed and gathered food, materials, and medicine for centuries?
This was really interesting. I'm surprised that more statues don't do the eyes like that -- it's ingenious! I never heard about this Greek point machine before. I like how the Mount Rushmore builders adapted it and scaled it up. Much love! 🤗💖👍❤️👍💜
they weren't significant till a some indigenous people claimed it was, which was AFTER the sculptures were complete. Just a group of so called indigenous looking for an easy payout
@@fodonogue3 are you one of those weird people that things white people have a perpetual neverending hatred for everyone brown? nobody cares about that for the same reason nobody cares about Dunadd hill. it's one little thing that eventually stopped being important and was overshadowed by some bigger kingdom with a bigger religion and a more widely-worshipped important thing. erasure of culture is not good, but it is not something you should reasonably get mad at entire races of people for. that's called "bigotry", to incorrectly use that word.
Kinda surprised a big channel didn’t talk about the significance the mountain had to the native Americans before they decided to carve some faces into it
In the vacation pictures I took many years ago, an Indian's face can clearly be seen next to Washington. And definitely, a Native American. I haven't seen that face in any other pictures. It's obviously not the shape of the rock. It's just how the shadows lined up on that day, at that hour. It was late July. Surely someone else must have pictures of it.
It's not really that important to them. It's been Rushmore for longer than it was a "sacred mountain" at this point. The Native peoples only lived in that area after being forcefully resettled
I have seen it (50 years ago!) What an amazing project it was. I am always fascinated by man's ability when a challenge like this is put forth. Giant kudos to the men who manned the drills and those who designed the tools to get it done. Let us not overlook the feat of making the staircase or air lines all the way up.
In 2020 it was discussed whether the monument should be torn down because of Borglums close relations to the KKK, however, they decided against it. In my opinion, a sound decision, I believe that all the effort put into the monument by the workers should be honored and tearing down Mount Rushmore would not serve as critic of racism and antisemitism but diminish years of work done by many. In addition, the money spent on a teardown could be used in much more effective ways, such as supporting the indigenous people whose land was taken from them to build Mount Rusmore.
An absolutely beautiful work of art. Out of anywhere we could have gone for our honeymoon we picked Mt. Rushmore, sure glad we did. A very magical and "awe" inspiring place, that was 29 years ago. We are heading back in the next year, there are several other areas near there that are worth visiting too.
I’m not an expert. But after viewing and analyzing this post from beginning to the end, line by line, word by word, letter by letter. I came to the conclusion and I can say that I can’t say anything because as I said at the beginning, I'm not an expert. And I don't know why people will just decide to waste their time reading my comment when clearly I have nothing to say. And this person is still reading it
0:51 ….not a few decades old…..natives were there for centuries. Further, it’s sad the very men that betrayed them are now a permanent fixture in a mountain.
It says “the state of South Dakota” was a few decades old, not “the land on which natives had already been living”. Otherwise, people have been there for closer to 20,000 - 30,000 years; which is beside the point.
Welcome to how history works, conquer your enemies land and then sculpt the land in your image. This isn't a new concept, and it will continue as long as humans exist. At one point, those mountains belonged to another tribe before the current one of that time took it over.
yes it was, the Sioux stole from others. The Lakota (also known as Sioux) arrived from Minnesota in the 18th century and drove out the other tribes, who moved west. They claimed the land, which they called Ȟe Sápa (Black Mountains). The mountains commonly became known as the Black Hills.
Mt. Rushmore has always been something I’ve thought of in my periphery, but this video really opened my eyes about the incredible engineering, time, and effort that went into creating it! It’s now on my bucket list of places I need to visit
I've seen Mt. Rushmore in person! I took my parents on a road trip. There is nothing around in SD other than Mt. Rushmore, but the visit was well worth it! Truly an iconic American landmark.
Who has seen Mount Rushmore in person? Shoutout to Incogni for making this vid possible, check them out here: incogni.com/primalspace
I wish i have. soon i will, though!
Meh
@@pyeitme508 whats meh mean
I was struck by just how isolated it is, even today. When it was built it must have been quite the project to consider building in the middle of nowhere.
The Lakota Sioux named the granite formation that became Mount Rushmore "Six Grandfathers" (Tȟuŋkášila Šákpe), which symbolizes ancestral deities representing the six directions. The Black Hills, where Mount Rushmore is located, were a sacred place for the Lakota Sioux for centuries. They used the area for prayer, gathering food, and building materials. Some Sioux view Mount Rushmore as a symbol of land theft, as the government took their land to build the monument. Others praise the monument as a symbol of American democracy and freedom.
What does it symbolize to you?
I'm astonished that nobody was lost on this project.
I'm amazed at this too after hearing about the hoover dam
There were plenty. They just weren't white.
You don't know about those natives who got displaced?
@@okman9684 no? What happened?
Me too. Our grandfathers were amazing
The square eye is a genius idea
Agreed!
Its nothing new, it was commonly done on architectural sculptures, and keystones on building facades in the 1880s
@@HobbyOrganistyou act like information in the 1880s travelled the same way it does today. Sure a guy across the world may have an idea. And a “common” practice of doing things. Doesn’t mean someone 10,000 miles away would have any idea.
@@austinpaxman503I used to think the same then a friend of mine who studied this said most things that last usually have the same technique through trial and error. He used the pyramids as an example saying they’re all over the world but no one knew about the other ones, bit they last coz it works, same with other buildings, bridges etc all the ones that don’t work get forgotten or damaged and the ones that do end up being similar.
And don’t forget people actually travelled the world 100years ago so they could’ve got some ideas seeing other monuments
@@austinpaxman503clock his tea
Hanging in a harness for eight hours is tough enough, but using a jackhammer the entire time would be absolutely punishing! Solid video!
They are just sitting. What was hard is the heat reflection into the men dehydrating them and a south facing mountain.
we literally still do this work.. i work offshore rope access
For 5 dollars a hour
No poonanyz back in those days like it is now
@@donaldkasper8346No. What was hard was black-lung disease. Alton Leach died of inhaling rock dust. As they all probably eventually died of. What are you talking about?
Before the faces were carved, Mt. Rushmore's beauty was un-presidented.
And now it's even better.
@@fredwright3790 yeah... No
Mount Rushmore and the other one are both huge eyesores
I don’t think either of y’all got the joke lmao
@@davidtucker1155 oh hahah funny joke
Mnt Rushmore looks like shit they should finish it
Good one😂
I'm 67 now and I saw it first time age 16 in 1973. It is awe-inspiring and the image of it stays with me.
I never thought that deeply about how Mount Rushmore was carved out but honestly now that I know the impressive history and engineering behind it, I really wanna see it myself
There really was so much more that went into it than I had previously thought. Thanks for watching and good luck in the giveaway!
Even the Roman statues of 200 BC already show that smart eye trick.
It is not just workers that made those Rushmore statues !!!
Designer Gutzon Borglum, a son of Danish immigrants is not just a random sculptor..he has studied at prestigious Paris art schools, worked in Spain and produced art for English queen Victoria before settling back in Utah.
This is truly a hard work. 14 years is such a long time for an art project.
It's not an art project, though, but a marketing campaign.
I'm blown away that instead of figuring it out first then proceeding with the project, he proceeded with the project and figured out how to achieve it. Very inspirational, I have been to Mt. Rushmore and it is difficult to imagine the scope of the project and the commitment required to build it. Awesome! Thank you for posting this video.
I was talking to my friend from New York about a month ago and we were talking about how could someone build such a structure we had 3 way calls with older people no one knew . Thanks to TH-cam now we know I've sent this video to 15 of my friends who were curious just like I was this video is truly amazing . Thank you
I have a pre-union/liberial 8th grade education and even I know stuff like this.
I have visited Mt. Rushmore many times and can never get away from the amazing craftsmanship. Beautiful!
One missed detail about Greek (and Roman) sculpture explaining the smooth eyes is that most of their statues were painted, just like their buildings.
Yep… poor research or lazy writing?
@@Jsjsjjssjslazy white washed writing. Same reason they just glossed over the fact that it was carved into sacred stolen land of those who came before.
It's neither relevant or missed. What are you talking about?
The murals in Pompeii were painted, also Egyption statues.
But Greek and Roman statues were made from white marble. And contrary to the narrative the eyes already show that "smart" trick designed by Master Sculptor Gutzon Borglum, a Utah born son of Danish immigrants....
@@jamilsalim4454 Thanks to you and "@_fishy" I learned something new today. I've been to many European museums in Italy and Germany in the early 1960s but no one ever mentioned that the ancient statues had been painted. I went with tour guides both by myself & with my family. That was never mentioned. Hmmm? I guess that confirms that I'll never get too old to learn something new. That's a good thing.
Like many, I feel the eyes were an absolute work of genius, but I'm also amazed that no lives were lost in the process.
Why assume you know the truth, though? 🤔🕊️
Alton Leach died of inhaling rock dust. As they all probably eventually died of. It's called 'black-lung disease'. What are you talking about?
@@thekeysman6760 Uhh... what? Are you implying theres some secret Mount Rushmore conspiracy?
Anyways, yeah, it truly is amazing how nobody passed away during this, especially compared to some other projects, even today.
@@ambuttablow But they did pass away later from black lung disease due to breathing rock dust. What are you talking about? Try living in reality, not your 'mind'. And conspiracy means a secret plan to do something unlawful or harmful. So again, what _are_ you talking about? Just nonsense.
Just watched your video, and now I can't stop thinking about Mount Rushmore in a whole new way. The way you broke it down made me realize how crazy it must have been to create something that massive. It’s not just a monument anymore; it feels like these giant faces are staring back at us with untold stories. You really got me thinking about how much more there is to history than we actually know or see. Hoping that I can see that in person in USA.
The fact that no lives where lost is incredible, definitely one of the world's greatest masterpieces.
Why do you assume you think you know the truth?
Alton Leach died of inhaling rock dust. As they all probably eventually died of. It's called 'black-lung disease'. What are you talking about?
My grandfather, and his twin brother were the dynamite guys on this project. That's one of them at 0:22
Which one 😂?
Thats amazing and crazy at the same time
That's how they made the faces symmetrical.
They were labeled LT and RT (Left Twin and Right Twin.)
OP, comma misuse. 🕊️
Congratulations! They are an important part of history...thanks for sharing!
Mount Rushmore is a marvel for so many reasons. I live on the east coast and it, as well as the surrounding area is on my bucket list.
With inflation thats about $9USD an hour today. Still terrible!
Due to the deflation from the great depression, the value of $0.50 increased to over $12 in 1933 before starting to fall again. Still not good though.
Just looking at inflation isn't the full picture. You have to also consider purchasing power.
@@--sqlis that not what inflation is?
@@AugieMJones er....yeah. :/
Published inflation figures are kept artificially low
Never actually been to mount rushmore (I live in europe) but it still fascinates me how it was built, the message it sends, and the lack of injury related to it.
It's a awesome place to visit, try to get there
Unless of course people did die and the truth was never told, eh? 🕊️
@@brucenedza4616An* awesome place to visit, not a awesome place. 🕊️
Alton Leach died of inhaling rock dust. As they all probably eventually died of. It's called 'black-lung disease'. What are you talking about?
@@thekeysman6760 who upset you 😭
My Husband, our Son, Daughter, & l had the privilege of visiting this amazing monument, years ago.....It was one our favorite adventures on a spring vacation. We enjoyed seeing this in person, and watching the film tutorial of its process. The experience, has remained etched in our memories, as a wonderful exoerience. We encourage any
one, who has the opportunity, to visit this amazing sight( and if not possible, to, at least, watch this, docufilm, which shares so much about the amazing conception, planning,
& brilliance of minds, enginuity, skill, & techniques, to create this monument)! We are ever still impressed! Thank you, for presenting and sharing this very informative docufilm on how this awesome monument came to be!
The engineering is amazing, you can see the monument from every tunnel through the black hills, either face on or in your rearview. It is cool!
I've seen it depicted in countless movies and TV shows. I'm planning on doing a tour of the US at one point in the next few years. Mount Rushmore will definitely be a stop! I somehow always idolized the family trip to that place!
Engineering is a beautiful profession. Rushmore is a testament to that.
8:21 ....Sure, just Sam will do
Well I mean… 🤷🏿
It's Niger not the other one. I'm gonna give sam the benefit of the doubt and assume it's the country and not a misspelled slur
Idiot. It's a country in Africa and doesn't even say what your illiterate 'mind' thinks it says! 😂Educate yourself before you make a prat of yourself in public. 🤦♂️🕊️
The depth of the eye and the reflection in it was amazing 👏
I'm floored at the ingenuity and intelligence of humans. It's truly amazing how people figure out how to do complex stuff like this.
Combining art with engineering in a great masterpiece!!! My new obsession 🤩
Those are ancient sacred mountains to the Lakota tribe it should have been mentioned. The us government broke their treaty
The fact that mount Rushmore is still attracting people\tourism even tho its not completely finished is just insane.Sheesh thanks guys for 100 likes!!
The fact a monument frozen in time from a world war that is one of the largest monuments in the world created in somewhat modern times with such intricate engineering for the technology they had at the time. Representing some of americas greatest presidents. Yep I have no idea why anyone would find that interesting.
People go to the Sagrada familia in Barcelona and that’s not finished, I went about 20years ago and they said 2025/26 it’ll be complete
Why bother finishing it if people already pay the entry fee?
@@ThomasHaxley yes, that should only apply to toll bridges, tunnels and roller coasters 😂
Why its insane
I remember visiting Mt. Rushmore as a child. It is quite impressive. Always interested in videos like this one that show more details about how it was actually created. I think the part about how the eyes were made is genius. Would love to return someday.
Our family visited Mount Rushmore when I was about 7 years old and was just as cool when I went back when I was 31 with my kids. Awesome to see they are still working on Crazy Horse that is nearby, too.
Was wondering if they were still doing work on Crazy Horse. That’s going to be a sight to behold.
Mount Rushmore is far more interesting than I ever would have guessed. Your work on this video was impressive!
I've been teaching my grandson, James, about Mount Rushmore since he was 3 years old. He's 5 now, and I can't wait to show him this video. It's so well done, and he's going to love it. Thank you!
You should teach him about the 6 Grandfathers, then. It's only appropriate he knows what was destroyed to create this.
Super interesting video! I’ve always wondered how it was done - but now I know! 🔨
This is absolutely an engineering marvel, it is amazing that they could almost completely replicate a model on a scale twelve times larger and improvise on critical points where necessary.
Mount Rushmore is one of the most remarkable artistic achievements in human history. There has never been nor will there ever be anything like it, and the period from 1927 to 1941 was the ideal time for its creation. Gutzon Borglum was the perfect person to bring this vision to life. I have visited Mount Rushmore multiple times throughout my life, and it always takes my breath away.
I'm familiar with Mount Rushmore but I haven't ever looked at it in detail. This video was amazing because it only showed the final product at the end and it really made me appreciate the effort that Borglum and those men put into the project. Especially the eyes are so perfect
"Because it showed"? It didn't though...
'So' perfect is a tautology. Perfect means what it means already. 🕊️
@@thekeysman6760 it showed the final product , read again please. Also, saying "so perfect" is a way of saying that something _subjectively_ looks so good it could be compared to perfection, adding a degree of expression. Example: "it came out so perfect I don't even want to touch it" is very different from "it came out perfect, I don't even want to touch it".
@@JordiR243 And therefore both usages of so perfect you gave _are_ tautological as I said. And it's still fine, either way! Chill. 🕊️
@@JordiR243 And Mt. Rushmore was never completed so I'm saying it didn't show it at the end. That's what I meant.
Rushmore proved himself as a genius when working at the eyes
I found the design of the eyes to be one of the most interesting parts. Thanks for watching and good luck in the giveaway.
yeah i liked the detail on the eyes its the most incredible thing i have seen!
Rushmore is the name of the mountain. Gutzon Borglum is the guy who was the great artist/genius.
Who is Rushmore
@@DreamGaming12 A mount
The fact they were going to add a secret compartment would be an awesome storyline for another national treasure movie!
this is a joke right? it was already in one of the movies
Look closely: George Washington's mouth opens to reveal a aircraft hanger.
@@andrewdavie5931 What do you mean?
@@micahbentley141 go watch the second national treasure movie
Oh yeah, stuff stored in there from the Knights Templar, and of course, the Ark is there.
Having been there to see this absolute masterpiece was a bucket list item for me. It is incredible to see what a vision the artist had and his ability to overcome many obstacles in front of him gives hope for everyone
Thanks once again for expanding my knowledge, I knew nothing about mt.rushmore before this video, also shoutout to the animators/3d artists the animation and rendering is great!
I have a special affinity with South Dakota. Although our Scottish family settled in Canada in 1820, my grandfather, born in Ontario, set out for the US territories to farm for himself and became a US citizen. My father was born in 1895 near Webster. I was born in Toronto in 1949. It has only been in the last few years I have had the time to travel to see where the farm was located, imagine settlers' hardships, and visit some graves. I always wanted to see this monument and did so the same trip.
Almost a surreal experience. I can't explain why I felt it was so small and so huge all at the same time! So glad I went.
What if you're jack-hammering, and whoops, there goes half the nose?
Whoops
Whoopsie
Given long enough time, that is probably going to happen on its own. Just look at early Egyptian statues (Sphynx, for example)
@vale.antoni
Inspection of the Sphinx suggests that the nose came off as a result of human activity, not weathering.
There's a reason Jefferson's head is reccessed into the mountain.
This is the first time I've heard the full details of this iconic structure's creation. Thank you for the history lesson!
I don't have words for the amount of hardwork and the risk workers took
The words are 'black-lung' which is what they died from due to breathing in rock dust.
His patience is another masterpiece
So true
A truly genius work of engineering. Bravo to the men who figured this out and kept everyone on the project alive!
Alton Leach died of inhaling rock dust. It's called 'black-lung disease'. What are you talking about?
And they all probably eventually died of it too.
@thekeysman6760 you're jealous of the white man.
this channel is amazing, all the 3d modelling and animation are so high quality 🤯👍👍👍
we're from Vancouver Canada, but we were able to visit Mt Rushmore in May of '24. Spectacular sight. Nice visitor center as well.
The Black Hills (Paha Sapa) are sacred to the Lakota Sioux and other Indigenous tribes. According to the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, the U.S. government recognized the Black Hills as part of the Great Sioux Reservation. However, when gold was discovered in the area, the treaty was ignored, and the land was seized.Gutzon Borglum had ties to white supremacist groups like the Ku Klux Klan.
Mount Rushmore is truly a marvel of engineering and art! The combination of explosives for large-scale work and meticulous hand carving for the finer details is mind-blowing.
You left out the part where Jefferson was going to be on the left but the rock was deemed too unstable and the blasted away two years worth of work on his face. They then moved him to the right side.
I am from Austria, never saw Mt Rushmore in person. It's a delicate work of art. Thanks for your documentary.
wooow, I am from Mexico and since I was a child I have been impressed with this piece of awsome endevour, I am 60 now and hopefully I will have a chance to visit in person this great, great work.
Truly Incredible 🙌 Thanks for posting!
And thank you for watching!
I've always been in awe of Mt Rushmore. One day I'd like to see it in person.
Thanks for the video!
Absolutely blown away by the depth and engineering details in this video! Your research and passion bring Mount Rushmore to life, making it more than just a monument but a true marvel of human achievement. The way you explain the technical and historical aspects is mesmerizing. Thank you for transforming history into such an engaging experience! This giveaway would be an incredible bonus, but honestly, the knowledge I’ve gained is the real reward. Keep up the phenomenal work!
Best of luck!
Totally agree with you!
Fascinating to learn about how the life-like eyes were done to look like it is reflecting light. Ingenious. Tks for the video
This was festinating. When I was in elementary school, my project state was South Dakota. I got to travel there as an adult and visited Mt. Rushmore and I got to fulfill a childhood dream. This video puts the icing on the cake.
5:07 what astonishes me is the fact that is always ignored and that fact is that the mountain is sacred to the Indians.
Everything is sacred to Indians, except working 😂😂
@@muira58 You realize you're going to Hell, right?
stay astonished. It's carved and done. It's awesome and that's that.
what astonishes me is that you can be offended for natives, but still call them indians haha
what astonishes me is that nobody cares about dunadd hill in scotland!
oh wait, it doesn't astonish me at all, because the religion and kingdom centered around it is completely dead!
the only reason mt. rushmore's significance to natives is more important to you than the significance of dunadd hill is that dunadd was a white cultural thing erased by another white culture, while mt rushmore was a brown person cultural thing erased by evil white folks.
We should honestly continue the project cause it would be great to see it actually finished ❤
It would be great to see it😊
It's on sacred native american land. Leave it as is, ugly enough.
@@GRMNCVS”Sacred” Native American land that was stolen from how many other civilizations before them?
@GRMNCVS
Too bad they lost it...we can do with it as we want.
Also, sacred to who? The tribe that "stole" the land from another tribe, who "stole" it from another tribe, and on and on.
@@tedbow001 I tried to say the same thing. My comment was shadow deleted. Millions of bot comments get through every day, but comments about stuff like this are instantly banned. Shows you what our TH-cam overlords think about us.
So no one's going to talk about the fact that they carved those faces into Six Grandfathers, a sacred mountain in the Black Hills where Plains tribes like the Arapaho, Cheyenne, and Lakota Sioux prayed and gathered food, materials, and medicine for centuries?
This was really interesting. I'm surprised that more statues don't do the eyes like that -- it's ingenious! I never heard about this Greek point machine before. I like how the Mount Rushmore builders adapted it and scaled it up.
Much love! 🤗💖👍❤️👍💜
It was breath taking. One of the highlights of my travelling life.
Highlights*. It is not a light that is high, which is what your two separate words mean. 🕊️
Better than modern art
No mention of the significance of the mountain to indigenous people?
Why would they? Anything that doesn’t idolise the colonisation and erasure of culture isn’t important to them.
they weren't significant till a some indigenous people claimed it was, which was AFTER the sculptures were complete. Just a group of so called indigenous looking for an easy payout
@@fodonogue3 are you one of those weird people that things white people have a perpetual neverending hatred for everyone brown? nobody cares about that for the same reason nobody cares about Dunadd hill. it's one little thing that eventually stopped being important and was overshadowed by some bigger kingdom with a bigger religion and a more widely-worshipped important thing. erasure of culture is not good, but it is not something you should reasonably get mad at entire races of people for. that's called "bigotry", to incorrectly use that word.
Yes because no one cares. For DEI somewhere else.
@@thejacksonles many people care, actually.
2:32 geoRGe WAshINGton hAd muLTIple HEAds?
ههههه
Mount Rushmore is a perfect example of a project ending with excellent results. It looks fantastic just as it is.
The length humanity will go to for things like this never cease to amaze me, our ability to mold the world how we see fit is absolutely crazy
I never noticed but it does look like they started Washington's body, It appears he has a collar.
It would be interesting to see them finished one day. Although I have a hard time envisioning it looking any different haha
I really wish they finished the bodies, especially with modern technology which would make sculpting a lot easier
Supreme content, keep it coming. Havent watched the vid yet but Ik its gonna be great
Thanks so much. So glad you enjoy the content here!
Kinda surprised a big channel didn’t talk about the significance the mountain had to the native Americans before they decided to carve some faces into it
In the vacation pictures I took many years ago, an Indian's face can clearly be seen next to Washington. And definitely, a Native American. I haven't seen that face in any other pictures. It's obviously not the shape of the rock. It's just how the shadows lined up on that day, at that hour. It was late July. Surely someone else must have pictures of it.
😂
The title is related to the design, so, I think it makes sense, but, understood.
It's not really that important to them. It's been Rushmore for longer than it was a "sacred mountain" at this point. The Native peoples only lived in that area after being forcefully resettled
Primitives don't matter.
I've been to Mount Rushmore many years ago. It was really cool to see in person, I would highly recommend it.
I have seen it (50 years ago!) What an amazing project it was. I am always fascinated by
man's ability when a challenge like this is put forth. Giant kudos to the men who manned
the drills and those who designed the tools to get it done. Let us not overlook the feat of
making the staircase or air lines all the way up.
Mount rushmore is like democracy's greatest group photo forever stuck on a mountain - no filter needed and also history's wildest celebrity selfie
USA is a Constitutional Federal Republic.
AI voice? Listen to 4:50
💯💯💯🎯💯💯💯
Sherlock. 😐🤦♂️
Yikes
I think we should start a petition to get Mount Rushmore finished
I find the giveaway prize very fitting as Mount Rushmore and giveaway cube both require some clever and advanced engineering
Absolutely genius to create on such scale.
One hell of a undertaking
The artist in me wants to salute , the engineer is impressed !
I think mount Rushmore is amazing!
So glad you agree. Thanks for watching and good luck in the giveaway.
Its mount rushmore.. absolutly no one says mountain rushmore. it doesn't sound as good.
how does a guy pitch this idea,
- do you see those mountains? I have an American remodel in my mind!
🤣🤣🤣 I can only imagine the looks I'd get pitching something like this now.
In 2020 it was discussed whether the monument should be torn down because of Borglums close relations to the KKK, however, they decided against it.
In my opinion, a sound decision, I believe that all the effort put into the monument by the workers should be honored and tearing down Mount Rushmore would not serve as critic of racism and antisemitism but diminish years of work done by many.
In addition, the money spent on a teardown could be used in much more effective ways, such as supporting the indigenous people whose land was taken from them to build Mount Rusmore.
An absolutely beautiful work of art. Out of anywhere we could have gone for our honeymoon we picked Mt. Rushmore, sure glad we did. A very magical and "awe" inspiring place, that was 29 years ago. We are heading back in the next year, there are several other areas near there that are worth visiting too.
Huge amounts of respect for whoever worked and was apart of this masterpiece video and mnt Rushmore
I’m not an expert. But after viewing and analyzing this post from beginning to the end, line by line, word by word, letter by letter. I came to the conclusion and I can say that I can’t say anything because as I said at the beginning, I'm not an expert. And I don't know why people will just decide to waste their time reading my comment when clearly I have nothing to say. And this person is still reading it
You sound like Kamala
I think it’s cute that Trump thinks that he’ll be up there one day. If he could have his way it would be up there within the next 4 years.
he would replace all four faces with his face doing four of his trademark expressons, then a hollywood sign style trump sign on top but gold plated
I've had Democrats tell me that Biden deserves to be up there. That's more ridiculous that Trump wanting to be up there.
@@krisstopher8259hahah I could see that 😂😂
Best they just finish the blooming thing already, prior to adding anything to it! 😂
Just gonna ignore the native Americans the land was stolen from...
Ya they were really busy with that mountain. I’m sure the tax free tourist income from their nearby casino is the last thing they wanted 😂😂
I was always so curious about how this was made. Glad I found this!
So glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching.
I feel like the commitment and true creativity we see in
these extremely unique projects is unheard of today.
0:51 ….not a few decades old…..natives were there for centuries. Further, it’s sad the very men that betrayed them are now a permanent fixture in a mountain.
It says “the state of South Dakota” was a few decades old, not “the land on which natives had already been living”.
Otherwise, people have been there for closer to 20,000 - 30,000 years; which is beside the point.
😂
Welcome to how history works, conquer your enemies land and then sculpt the land in your image.
This isn't a new concept, and it will continue as long as humans exist.
At one point, those mountains belonged to another tribe before the current one of that time took it over.
Awesome engineering he could have made more cool things if it weren't for world war two!
Stolen land.
Conquered 😏😎 get over it
Just stop.
yes it was, the Sioux stole from others. The Lakota (also known as Sioux) arrived from Minnesota in the 18th century and drove out the other tribes, who moved west. They claimed the land, which they called Ȟe Sápa (Black Mountains). The mountains commonly became known as the Black Hills.
This video deserves a lot more views. It’s so well put together and concise.
Mt. Rushmore has always been something I’ve thought of in my periphery, but this video really opened my eyes about the incredible engineering, time, and effort that went into creating it! It’s now on my bucket list of places I need to visit
So glad you enjoyed it! It really is an engineering marvel! Thanks for watching and good luck in the giveaway!
It’s so fascinating
It is incomplete but greatest work of art I have seen thus far ❤
Thanks @primalspace for letting us know about this 😊
Thanks Primal Space
Hats off to the sculptor and worker who uses creativity to create such an enormous masterpiece
I've seen Mt. Rushmore in person! I took my parents on a road trip. There is nothing around in SD other than Mt. Rushmore, but the visit was well worth it! Truly an iconic American landmark.
Very cool to see in person. Thanks for watching and good luck in the giveaway!
This makes me want to go see it. I saw your video on Venice’s insane engineering, you got a new subscriber, these videos are great dude!
It was interesting to see the before/after image of Mount Rushmore, it's crazy that such a feat is even possible