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May/June 2007
Crazy Horse memorial near Custer South Dakota

By Chris Woolston

The biggest face in South Dakota’s Black Hills belongs not to a president but to a chief. Seventeen miles southwest of Mount Rushmore, the 88-foot-tall visage of Crazy Horse, the famed Lakota warrior, scowls out from a granite mountainside.

Occasional blasts with explosives continue to uncover a horse’s head and the chief’s outstretched arm, bringing the mountain ever closer to the vision of sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski.

The visitor center and Indian art museum offer fine views of the work in progress, but Crazy Horse looks even better up close. During the annual walk, or Volksmarch—June 2 and 3 this year—as many as 15,000 people tramp three miles up to share the chief’s view before hiking back down. For more on the Volksmarch, see www.crazyhorse.org/events.shtml or call the visitor center at (605) 673-4681.

 


Photography courtesy Crazy Horse Memorial Fund


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This article was first published in May 2007. Some facts
may have aged gracelessly. Please call ahead to verify information.


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