Norbeck-Williamson Act of 1929
Other short titles |
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Long title | An Act creating the Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission and defining its purposes and powers. |
Nicknames | Mount Rushmore National Memorial Act of 1929 |
Enacted by | the 70th United States Congress |
Effective | February 25, 1929 |
Citations | |
Public law | Pub. L. 70–805 |
Statutes at Large | 45 Stat. 1300 |
Legislative history | |
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Norbeck-Williamson Act of 1929 or Mount Rushmore National Memorial Act of 1929 established the Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission defining the powers and purpose of the twelve member committee. The Act of Congress authorized the Mount Harney Memorial Association of South Dakota to stone carve models of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt in the Harney National Forest encompassed by the Black Hills National Forest. The granite sculpture was to be created in accordance with the rock relief designs by Gutzon Borglum.
In 1928, the 70th Congressional session members Peter Norbeck and William Williamson formulated the code of law for the Mount Rushmore National Memorial Act. The Senate bill was passed by the United States Congressional session and enacted into law by the 30th President of the United States Calvin Coolidge on February 29, 1929.
Clauses of the Act
[edit]The Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission Act was drafted as six sections describing the purposes of the United States statute.
- Sec. 1 - Commission Composition and Creation
- Members allowance for expenses
- Compensation for secretary
- Sec. 2 - Organization
- Selection of treasurer
- Membership of executive committee
- Sec. 3 - Completion of Memorial
- Sec. 4 - Authority
- Mount Harney Memorial Association property rights
- Disbursement and receivables of funds
- Employment of artists and sculptors
- Other powers
- Sec. 5 - Federal Contribution Limitation
- Advance to treasurer of appropriated funds
- Condition of funds to treasurer
- Sec. 6 - Report to Congress
Amendments to 1929 Act
[edit]U.S. Congressional amendments to the Mount Rushmore National Memorial Commission Act.
Date of Enactment | Public Law Number | U.S. Statute Citation | U.S. Legislative Bill | U.S. Presidential Administration |
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June 26, 1934 | P.L. 73-471 | 48 Stat. 1223 | S. 3533 | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
August 29, 1935 | P.L. 74-393 | 49 Stat. 962 | S. 3204 | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
June 15, 1938 | P.L. 75-629 | 52 Stat. 694 | H.R. 10462 | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
May 22, 1940 | P.L. 76-519 | 54 Stat. 218 | H.R. 8357 | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
See also
[edit]Documentary Film Bibliography
[edit]- Mount Rushmore - An Evolving Idea on YouTube
- Mount Rushmore - Telling America's Stories on YouTube
- Mount Rushmore Was Supposed to Look Very Different on YouTube
- Mount Rushmore - Who are the Faces on the Mountain? on YouTube
- Mount Rushmore - Winter at the Memorial on YouTube
- The Hall of Records, A Not So Secret Room on YouTube
- The Sculptor's Studio Talk at Mount Rushmore National Memorial on YouTube
Further reading
[edit]- Fite, Gilbert Courtland (1952). Mount Rushmore. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 1–272. ISBN 978-0964679856. OCLC 1524519.
- Domek, Tom; Hayes, Robert E. (May 15, 2006). Mt. Rushmore and Keystone (SD) (Images of America). Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0738539614.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Mount Rushmore National Memorial at Wikimedia Commons
- Black Hills National Forest travel guide from Wikivoyage
- "Asks Hoover to Unveil Mountain Memorial – Borglum Says Coolidge Also Wishes to Attend Ceremony at Mt. Rushmore on July 4". The Times’s Archive. The New York Times. March 29, 1930.
- Roosevelt, Franklin D. (August 30, 1936). "Informal Extemporaneous Remarks at Mount Rushmore National Memorial - August 30, 1936". Internet Archive. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Service. pp. 309–310.
- "Mount Rushmore Founders and Sponsors". National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior.
- "Mount Rushmore Historical Letters and Legislation". National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior.
- "Mount Rushmore Memorial History". National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior.
- "Mount Rushmore National Memorial". South Dakota State Historical Society. State of South Dakota.
- Borglum, Gutzon (1925). "Statues of Abraham Lincoln - Mount Rushmore". Internet Archive. Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection. OCLC 1085320578.
- "The Presidents and The National Parks". WhitehouseHistory.org. Washington, D.C.: White House Historical Association.
- Monument Men - The Road to Rushmore (DVD). San Francisco, California: Mill Creek Entertainment. 2015. OCLC 961877895.
- "Mount Rushmore Society". Speartek, Inc.