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Franklin D. Roosevelt: Remarks at Mount Rushmore National Memorial.
Franklin
Franklin D. Roosevelt
111 - Remarks at Mount Rushmore National Memorial.
August 30, 1936
Location:

United States
South Dakota
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I think my friends, that there are two people who told me about this in the early days. One of them was Mr. Borglum and the other was Senator Norbeck.

On many occasions, when a new project is presented to you on paper, and, later on you see the accomplishment, you are disappointed; but just the opposite is the fact in what we are looking at now. I had seen photographs, I had seen the drawings, and I had talked with those who are responsible for this great work. Yet I had had no conception until about ten minutes ago, not only of its magnitude, but of its permanent beauty and of its permanent importance.

Mr. Borglum has well said that this can be a monument and an inspiration for the continuance of the Democratic-Republican form of government, not only in our own beloved country, but, we hope, throughout the world.

This is the second dedication. There will be others by other Presidents in other years. When we get through, there will be something for the American people that will last not merely through generations but for thousands and thousands of years.

I think that we can perhaps meditate a little on those Americans ten thousand years from now, when the weathering on the faces of Washington and Jefferson and Lincoln shall have proceeded to perhaps the depth of a tenth of an inch, and wonder what our descendants—and I think they will still be here will think about us.

Let us hope that at least they will give us the benefit of the doubt, that they will believe we have honestly striven every day and generation to preserve for our descendants a decent land to live in and a decent form of government to operate under.

I am very glad to have come here today informally. It is right and proper that I should have come informally, because we do not want formalities where Nature is concerned.

What we have done so far exemplifies what I have been talking about in the last few days—cooperation with Nature and not fighting against Nature.

I am happy to congratulate all of you not only on what we see today, but on what is going to happen in the future at Mount Rushmore.



Citation: John T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA. Available from World Wide Web: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=15109.
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