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Lincoln Borglum

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Nationality
  
American

Known for
  
Sculpture, Photography

Parents
  
Gutzon Borglum

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Lincoln Borglum


Lincoln Borglum Borglum Family Tree and Danish Geneology Links and Resources

Full Name
  
James Lincoln de la Mothe Borglum

Born
  
April 9, 1912 (
1912-04-09
)

Died
  
January 27, 1986, Corpus Christi, Texas, United States

Books
  
Mount Rush: The Story Behind the Scenery, My Father's Mountain

Structures
  
Mount Rush National Memorial

Similar People
  
Gutzon Borglum, Charles E Rush, Doane Robinson, Solon Borglum, Theodore Roosevelt

Lincoln Borglum Visitor Center, Mt Rushmore NM, South Dakota


James Lincoln de la Mothe Borglum (April 9, 1912 – January 27, 1986) was an American sculptor, photographer, author and engineer; he was best known for overseeing the completion of the Mount Rushmore National Memorial after the death in 1941 of the project's leader, his father, Gutzon Borglum. One of his best-known works, a bust of his father, is on display outside the Lincoln Borglum Visitors Center at Mount Rushmore.

Contents

Lincoln Borglum photoswikimapiaorgp0001840549bigjpg

Life and career

Named after his father's favorite president, Abraham Lincoln, and called by his middle name, Lincoln Borglum was the first child of Gutzon Borglum and his second wife, Mary Montgomery Williams (1874-1955). During his youth, Lincoln accompanied his father to the Black Hills of South Dakota and was present when the site for the Mount Rushmore monument was selected. Although he had originally planned to study engineering at the University of Virginia, Lincoln Borglum began work on the monument in 1933 at the age of 21 as an unpaid pointer. Lincoln Borglum quickly moved into a series of more important jobs: He was put on the payroll in 1934, promoted to assistant sculptor in 1937, and promoted to superintendent in 1938 with an annual salary of $4,800.

Gutzon Borglum had nearly completed the 60-foot heads of the four presidents (Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and T. Roosevelt) when he died on March 6, 1941. Lincoln Borglum had to abandon his father's ambitious plans to carry the work down to include the torsos of the presidents and an entablature due to a lack of funding; he left the monument largely in the state of completion it had reached under his father's direction.

Borglum was appointed Mount Rushmore National Memorial's first superintendent and began serving on October 1, 1941. The work on the monument officially stopped on October 31, 1941. He served in that capacity until May 15, 1944.

Borglum continued to work as a sculptor after leaving Mount Rushmore. He created several religious works for churches in Texas, including the well-known shrine Our Lady of Loreto in Goliad. Borglum also wrote three books, all about the sculpting of Mount Rushmore.

Lincoln Borglum was a member of Battle River Masonic Lodge No. 92 in Hermosa, South Dakota. Like many of the men who worked on the Rushmore project, Borglum's lungs were permanently scarred from breathing in granite dust associated with the blasting. Borglum died in Corpus Christi, Texas, at the age of 73.

Selected works

  • My Father's Mountain (1965)
  • Borglum's Unfinished Dream (Co-written with June Culp Zeitner, 1976)
  • Mount Rushmore: The Story Behind the Scenery (1977)
  • References

    Lincoln Borglum Wikipedia