Four-hundred workers constructed this sculpture in very dangerous conditions removing about 450,000 ton of the rock carved out of the mountain to make the massive heads of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln in which all of them reach a height of about sixty feet. The working conditions for the worker were awful. They had to work through conditions that could have been insanely cold and windy to super hot. Each and every day they had to climb up about seven-hundred stairs to the top of the mountain and do they're dangerous but important job. After they climbed the stairs, a ⅜ inch thick steel cable would lower them down in front of the huge mountain face while in a bosun chair. Alot of the workers absolutely did not like heights and hated it but during what was the …show more content…
Though he wanted to carve entire bodies, he would soon find out that would not work. Because Robinson was not a sculptor, he contacted Gutzon Borglum who was at the time sculpting the face of Robert E. Lee into Stone Mountain, Georgia. “In the letter that Doane sent to Gutzon, he stated that he wanted Borglum to visit him in South Dakota to discuss the possibility of carving a great monument into the mountain.” Borglum was agreeable to see what he could do. “He traveled to South Dakota twice to meet Robinson in September of 1924 and August of 1925.” While Borglum was on his second trip he found a good location to build Mount Rushmore and worked really hard from that point on to try to get it done