Subject: Mount Rushmore
Open Letter To: South Dakota SHPO Dear Mr. Rogers, A group of us in art and historic conservation science has worried that Mt. Rushmore personnel may have bought a 'pig in a poke', FREE, from Germany. Even the article in 'Cleaning Times' printed below (after your kind reply to me in July 2005) has not soothed our concern but brought out new questions. Our interest remains high so please keep us apprised of any problems with losses of materials from the awesome mountain faces or particularly losses from the massive foundation of artwork-support materials, immediately below the faces in the mountain sides. Some of us are appalled for several reasons, including the fact that no RFP was offered to us and no tests were done on any adjacent area of Mt. Rushmore, say for a year before- to check out any serious seasonal effects of the environment after application of the cleaning process used for free! We hope and pray there are no adverse effects in coming years but 'hope and pray' is not necessary if a test or two had been done! A test is worth a thousand expert opinions, after all. Stephen.Rogers<-a t->state< . >sd< . >us wrote: 1. We received notification from Mount Rushmore that they had determined this to be an undertaking that was a programmatic Exclusion under the 1995 Programmatic Agreement with NPS. The notification stated that it was excluded from review under stipulation B.1 Preservation Maintenance. Of course, the fact that we received it on 5 July and the work started on 5 July rather precluded us from arguing the point. It states in the documentation that PMIS #67562 "MZW Preserve and Clean Mount Rushmore Sculpture" identified power wash of the sculpture as part of the 3 year work plan. The project was evidently approved by the Regional Office in December 2001. I do not remember ever seeing this document. 2. I do believe there is a plausible concern over the growth on the monument. The cracks that are formed can continue to grow and expand in South Dakota's freeze-thaw cycle. Whether power washing was appropriate, I am still not sure. In fact, the info I received never discussed the amount of pressure to be used, but did say test areas were completed in April. 3. I do not know who may have been consulted. N. J. Bud Goldstone, writer, art conservation engineer *** Conservation DistList Instance 19:28 Distributed: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 Message Id: cdl-19-28-013 ***Received on Wednesday, 23 November, 2005