Background
Ziolkowski was born September 6, 1908 in Boston to Polish parents. Orphaned at the age of one, he grew up in a series of foster homes.
Ziolkowski was born September 6, 1908 in Boston to Polish parents. Orphaned at the age of one, he grew up in a series of foster homes.
Although he never received any formal art training, his gifts as a sculptor began to show at an early age. After putting himself through Rindge Technical School, he became an apprentice to a Boston ship maker. His first marble sculpture, made in 1932, honored Judge Frederick Pickering Cabot who had inspired him as a child growing up in the rough neighborhoods of Boston.
Ziolkowski moved to New Britain, Connecticut, to begin life as a professional artist.
He began to sell commissioned sculpture throughout New England, Boston, and New New York In 1939, he assisted Gutzon Borglum in the carving of the Mountain.
Rushmore Memorial in South Dakota"s Black Hills, near Keystone. The fame as well as his familiarity with the Black Hills prompted several Lakota Chiefs to approach him about a monument honoring Native Americans.
Chief Henry Standing Bear of the Lakota wrote him, saying, "My fellow chiefs and I would like the white man to know the red man has great heroes, too."
Ziolkowski met with the leaders shortly afterward and began planning a monument.
Over the next few years, he conducted research and began planning the sculpture. He put the project on hold when the United States entered World World War World War II He volunteered for service in the United States Army and was wounded in 1944 at Omaha Beach in Normandy. In 1947 Ziolkowski moved to the Black Hills, and began to search for a suitable mountain for his sculpture.
Korczak thought the Wyoming Tetons would be the best choice, where the rock would be better for carving, but the Lakota wanted the memorial in the sacred Black Hills on a 600-foot (180 m)-high mountain.
The monument was to be the largest sculpture in the world. When completed, it would be 563 feet (172 m) high by 641 feet (195 m) lougitude
Crazy Horse"s head would be large enough to contain all the 60-foot (18 m)-high heads of the Presidents at Mount Rushmore. On June 3, 1948, the first blast was made, and the memorial was dedicated to the Native American people.
In 1950, Ziolkowski and Ruth Ross, who had become a volunteer at the monument, were married.
Work continued slowly, since he refused to accept government grants. Instead, as he personally stated on a guest appearance on the television show "To Tell the Truth", he raised money for the project by charging seventy-five cents admission to the monument work area. Ziolkowski continued his work until he died of acute pancreatitis at age 74 at the monument site in 1982.
He was buried in a tomb at the base of the mountain.
After his death, his widow, Ruth Ziolkowski, took over the project as director of the Foundation. Ruth Ziolkowski died May 21, 2014, aged 87.
Member National Sculpture Society Home: Sturgis, North.D</td><tr><td class="label_burgverd11px"><b>Death</b></td></tr><tr><td> December