Our Family Trip 2015 : Mount Rushmore!


~Abraham Lincoln

After an already wonderful first day in the Black Hills, we topped it off with an evening visit to
Mount Rushmore.  Both Randy and I had been here in our youth and we were excited to return with the kids all these years later.  The faces on the mountain did not disappoint.

On our drive from Needles Highway to the Mount, we looked for a place to grab some supper but didn't find anything.  Then our hope was that we would find something at Rushmore.  Here we are, after we parked in the elaborate, multi-level parking area, walking toward the monument mountain...


Happy but hungry...


We did find a very nice, very large food cafeteria with all the food and treats you could ever want.  We took turns getting our food and while we waited, we kept looking up at those faces...


~ Theodore Roosevelt


~ George Washington


Enjoying a hot supper with a stately view...


Then, enjoying some cold ice cream cones on the Avenue of Flags,  under Montana!


Then we walked the presidential trail, a 0.6 mile hike around and under the faces.  

"The purpose of the memorial is to communicate the founding, expansion, preservation, and unification of the United States with colossal statues of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt."-Gutzon Borglum, creator

George Washington signifies the struggle for independence and the birth of the Republic; 


Thomas Jefferson represents the territorial expansion of the country;


 Abraham Lincoln stand for the permanent union of the States and equality for all citizens;


Theodore Roosevelt exemplifies the 20th century role of the United States in world affairs and the industrial growth of the nation.


On the trail and looking back toward the amphitheater...


And back again to the Lincoln Borglum Visitors Center, learning about the creation of the faces...


We should not look back unless it is to derive useful lessons from past errors, and for the purpose of profiting by dearly bought experience.
~George Washington


By this time of the evening, one little girl was very tired out...


But the evening wasn't over yet, time for the Evening Lighting Ceremony.  We went out to sit down long before the show because people were pouring in in the hundreds and thousands...


~ Thomas Jefferson


This doesn't do justice to the mass of people that were there on that Tuesday night.  The balcony was full, the stares and all the seats as it got nearer to the program.  Currently an average of 2,500 people attend the Lighting Ceremony nightly according to the park service...


~ Theodore Roosevelt


~Thomas Jefferson

It was truly a remarkable evening and one I hope to remember for a very long time.  A very patriotic, touching tribute to our country and the great, virtuous men who founded it.  It was a great lesson in history for the kids and a reminder for us adults of all we have to be thankful for.  Then there was a tribute to all the service men and women in the audience.  They were all asked to come down and there were rows of them on stage.  They gave their name and what branch of Military they served in... very touching!  And then they lit the faces.  Breathtaking.

We were all very tired as we made our way to our pickup out in the parking area with the masses of people.  It was very late by the time we returned to our campsite and Melita was sound asleep.  It didn't take us long to climb into our beds and fall asleep too.  It had truly been a day to remember.

Please take your loved ones to Mount Rushmore sometime in your life!  It'll be worth the trip, I promise. :)

~ Abraham Lincoln

4 comments:

amylin said...

Just had a catch-up on your summer trip... love all those places and memories of being in some of them with our kids. Yours are growing up!

Thistle Cove Farm said...

Travel is fabulous and fun; from the time I was little, our family traveled to far flung USA places. Daddy had 2 weeks vacation and every summer we'd see the USA from a pick-up truck and camper. The summer we went to Mount Rushmore was great; Dad rented a 'copter and he and I flew over Rushmore. What wonderful memories!
From your lovely photos, I see how much it's changed. There was no huge visitor center, no theatre, certainly no place to eat but the view is still the same.
Try Yellowstone, if you haven't. When we visited there, we stood and looked down into Old Faithful, counted and then backed away a minute or two before eruption. I've heard that's no longer possible as some ejits forget to back away.

Ryan said...

Hey Alison! It's been fun following along on your trip. I guess I didn't realize how much there was to do in the Black Hills. It seems like a neat place to go visit someday!

Melinda said...

Wow! I don't remember all of these things being there when we were kids. Very cool!