Trail of the Whispering Giants

The Trail of the Whispering Giants is a collection of sculptures by Hungarian-born[1] artist Peter Wolf Toth.[2] The sculptures range in height from 20 to 40 feet (6.1 to 12.2 m), and are between 8 and 10 feet (2.4 and 3.0 m) in diameter.[3] Currently there are 74 Whispering Giants,[2] with at least one in each of the 50 U.S. states, as well as in Ontario and Manitoba, Canada,[3] and one in Hungary.[4] In 1988, Toth completed his goal of placing at least one statue in each of the 50 states, by carving one in Hawaii, and in 2008, he created his first Whispering Giant in Europe, Stephen I of Hungary in Délegyháza,[5] Hungary along the Danube River.[4]

In 2009, eight more Whispering Giants were planned.[2]

The sculptures

(Update February 2, 2015) The Trail of the Whispering Giants is an ongoing project and much of the material here especially the chart below is out of date and too extensive to edit fully this article. A traveler, David Schumaker, went on a quest to identify all the Whispering Giant statues and has documented 57 existing statues and identified 12 that are now missing or destroyed since Peter Wolf Toth began this project in 1972. Mr. Schumaker has documented his information on the WEB site Peter Wolf Toth where you will find the most current information on the Whispering Giants and messages from the artist himself.[6]

The 74 Whispering Giants range from 15 to 40 feet (4.6 to 12.2 m) in height,[3] and all resemble natives of the region in which they are located. Toth always donates the Whispering Giant he creates to the town he carved it in, and never charges a fee for his time. He does require that the raw materials (a large log between 8 and 10 feet (2.4 and 3.0 m) in diameter) be provided, as well as lodging and living expenses.[3] The carvings have been appraised at a quarter of a million dollars each.[3]

Toth uses a hammer and a chisel as the basic tools to create the Whispering Giants, but on occasion will use a mallet and an axe, or rarely power tools.[7] Before starting work on a Whispering giant, Toth confers with local Native American tribes and local lawmakers.[7] The sculpture that is created is a composite of all the physical characteristics, especially facial features, of the local tribe or tribes, as well as their stories and histories.[7]

Currently Peter Toth resides in Edgewater, Florida, where he has a small studio where he carves small wooden statues to raise money to create more Whispering Giants.[4] He travels around America to repair Whispering Giants he carved in the past that have not been kept up, as well as to carve new ones.[4] The latest Whispering Giant carved was in Vincennes, Indiana, in 2009 out of Black Oak, but there are still eight more statues planned to be built.[2]

The Trail

# Date Location State/Province Medium Approx. Height Picture/Name Status
1[8] 1972, February La Jolla California Rock
beach cliff
Lost[9]
2[10] 1972, Summer Akron Ohio Maple
3[11][12] 1973, January DeLand Florida Oak 7 feet Lost to rot
4[13][14] 1973, February Colquitt
U.S. Highway 27
Georgia Red Cedar 18 feet Replaced with number 70. Reason for replacement unknown.
5[15][16] 1973, April Dothan

Houston-Love Memorial Library

Alabama Oak 20 feet Mus-Quoian
6[17] 1973, June Sharon Pennsylvania Elm 20 feet
Seneca
7[18][19] 1973, August Dunkirk

Route 5, Lake Shore Drive West

New York Elm 7.5 feet Ong-Gwe-Ohn-Weh
8[20][21] 1973, October Wheeling West Virginia Elm 14 feet Kanououara Destroyed by Dutch elm disease
9[22][23] 1973, December Cleveland

Museum Center at 5ive Points

Tennessee Oak 10 feet Cherokee Chieftain
10[24][25] 1974, January Punta Gorda

Holiday Inn, 300 Retta Esplanade

Florida Parota 15 feet
11[26] 1974, October Vancouver Washington White Fir 25 feet
12[27] 1975, February New Orleans Louisiana Oak In storage.[5]
13[28][29] 1975, April Little Rock

Arkansas Arts Center

Arkansas Oak 20 feet
14[30] 1975, June Fort Wayne Indiana 25 feet Destroyed by termites.[5]
15[31][32] 1975, August Lansing

Potter Park Zoo

Michigan Elm 29 feet 3 inches Removed in 2012.[33]
16[34] 1975, October Sparland Illinois Oak
17[35][36] 1975, December Ocean Springs

Davidson Park

Mississippi Cypress 27 feet Crooked Feather
18[37] 1976, March Wilmington

Greenfield Park

North Carolina Oak 27 feet In 1979, the statue was moved from Greenfield Park to a walking trail near the "Lion's Bridge". In 1986, it was moved again to Buckhead, NC.[38] Replaced by Statue #71.
19[39][40] 1976, May Virginia Beach

Mount Trashmore City Park

Virginia Cypress 24 feet
20[41] 1976, July Atlantic City New Jersey Tulip Poplar Missing (status unknown).[5]
21[42][43] 1976, September Ocean City

South Second Street & Baltimore Avenue

Maryland Oak 20 feet Assateague Indian
22[44][45] 1976, December Bethany Beach Delaware poplar 27 feet Chief Little Owl Destroyed by high winds in 1992; remains located at Indian Museum in Millsboro. Replaced in early 1990s, and again in 2002 with Statue #69.
23[46][47] 1977, February Charleston South Carolina

Charles Towne Landing

Darlington Oak 24 feet Landing Brave
24[48][49] 1977, May St. Louis

Forest Park

Missouri Oak 19 feet
25[50][51] 1977, July Two Harbors

Information Center 8, Highway 61 East

Minnesota Pine 30 feet
26[52][53] 1977, September Hayward

Carnegie Library

Wisconsin Oak 34 feet Tribute to the Ojibwe
27[54] 1977, November Desert Hot Springs
Cabot's Pueblo Museum
California Sequoia/Cedar
Waokiye
28[55] 1978, June Iowa Falls Iowa Cottonwood
29[56][57] 1978, September Troy

Doniphan County Courthouse

Kansas Burr Oak 27 feet
Tall Oak
30[58] 1979, May Broken Bow Oklahoma Cypress
31[59][60] 1979, August Loveland

2033 Waterdale Drive, Rock Ridge Ranch

Colorado Cottonwood 37 feet
Redman
Relocated to a private ranch on the northern side of US Route 34 (west of Loveland, CO) from its original location on the southern shore of Lake Loveland.
32[61][62] 1979, October Red Lodge

Red Lodge Library

Montana Ponderosa Pine 25 feet
33[63][64] Winslow

Winslow Visitor Center

Arizona Ponderosa Pine 40 feet
34[65] 1980, May Texarkana Texas Red Oak Missing (status unknown).[5]
35[66][67] 1980, July Lincoln

Lincoln Indian Center

Nebraska Cottonwood 25 feet
36[68][69] 1980, September Worland

Washakie County Courthouse

Wyoming Douglas fir 20 feet
Brave 36 - Trail of Whispering Giants
Brave 36 of trail of whispering giants
37[70][71] 1980, November Idaho Falls

North Tourist Park, Lincoln Road and North Yellowstone Highway

Idaho Douglas Fir 27 feet
38[72][73] 1981, June Aberdeen

Anderson Park

South Dakota Cottonwood 25 feet Moved indoors for repair; viewable by appointment.[5]
39[74][75] 1981, August Mandan

Stage Stop, 601 6th Avenue Southeast

North Dakota Cottonwood 25 feet
40[76][77] 1981, October Valdez

Prince William Sound College

Alaska Sitka spruce 25 feet
41[78][79] 1982, May Osceola Iowa Cottonwood Destroyed in 1993 by winds and flood; replacement created by Jesse Kuhs.[5]
42[80][81] 24 July 1982 Narragansett

Sprague Memorial Park

Rhode Island Douglas fir 20 feet
Enishkeetompauog Narragansett
43[82] 1982, October Groton Connecticut Douglas fir In storage.[5]
44[12][83] 1983, May Ft. Lauderdale

Seminole Indian tribe trading post

Florida Cypress 30 feet
45[84][85] 24 July 1983 Plymouth

Tourist Information Center, Route 3, Exit 5

Massachusetts Red Oak 30 feet
Enisketomp
46[86] 1983, October Bar Harbor Maine Elm Glooscap
47 [87][88] 22 July 1984 Burlington

Battery Park

Vermont Red Oak 34 feet
Chief Grey Lock
48[89] 1984, September Laconia

Opechee Park

New Hampshire Red Oak 36 feet
Keewakwa Abenaki Keenahbeh
49[90] 1984, November Springfield

Forest Park

Massachusetts 15 feet
Omiskanoagwiah
50[91] 1985, May Paducah

Bob Noble Park

Kentucky Red Oak 35 feet
Wacinton
The sculpture was restored during the summer of 2016.[92][93]
51[94] 1985, August Akron

Fairlawn Elementary School

Ohio Red Oak 30 feet Rotaynah
52[95][96] 23 November 1985 Murray

City Park

Utah Cottonwood
Chief Wasatch
53[97] 1986 Reno

Idlewild Park

Nevada 17 feet Wa-Pai-Shone
54[98] 1986 Las Cruces

Southeast of Hwy 70

New Mexico Pine 20 feet Dineh
55[99] 29 November 1986 Johnson City

Metro-Kiwanis Park

Tennessee Chestnut Oak 25 feet
Chief Junaluska
56[100][101] 1986, August Hillsboro

Shute Park

Oregon Douglas Fir 25 feet
Chief Kno-Tah
57[102] 1987 Astoria

Youngs Bay Bridge

Oregon Cedar 18 feet Ikala Nawan
58[103] 1988, May Hale'iwa

59-254 Kamehameha Highway, between Sunset Beach and Sunset Beach Elementary School

Hawaii Douglas Fir or redwood 25 feet
Maui Pohaku Loa
59[104] 1988, October Wakefield

Dock on Sunday Lake

Michigan 20 feet
Nee-Gaw-Nee-Gaw-Bow
60[105] 1988 North Bay

Welcome Center

Ontario, Canada 16 feet Nibising
61[106] 1989, May Ottawa

Welcome Center

Illinois 13 feet Ho-Ma-Sjah-Nah-Zhee-Ga
62[107] 1989 Utica

Starved Rock State Park

Illinois Oak 20 feet Chief Walks with the Wind
63[108] 1989, September Cherokee

Museum of the Cherokee Indian

North Carolina 22 feet
Sequoyah
64[109] 1989 Concord

"Buffalo Ranch" (defunct)[110]

North Carolina 20 feet Severely damaged
65[111][112] 1989, October Williamsport

Brandon Park

Pennsylvania 20 feet Woapalanee
66[113] Hollywood

Seminole Reservation

Florida May have been moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
67[114] 1992 Winnipeg Beach

In the Town Square

Manitoba, Canada Cedar 30 feet Anishinaabe
68[115] 1999 Iowa Falls

Foster Blvd., adjacent to the Veterans Memorial overlooking the Iowa River

Iowa 30 feet New statue replacing Statue #28[116]
69[117] 2002 Bethany Beach

Front of Town Hall on Garfield Parkway

Delaware 25 feet Chief Little Owl In 1992, termites and high winds destroyed Statue #22. A replacement statue was carved out of white oak by Dennis D. Beach and lasted until 2000. Statue #69 carved by Peter Wolf Toth in 2002 replaces Statue #22[118]
70[119] 2002 Colquitt

Chamber of Commerce building on Highway 27

Georgia 18 feet New statue replaces Statue #4[120]
71[121] 2005 Buckhead

Waccamaw Siouan Indian Reservation

North Carolina 16 feet New statue replaces Statue #18 that was moved to this location from Wilmington, NC[38]
72[122] 2005 Whiteville

North Carolina Museum of Forestry

North Carolina 16 feet
73[4][5] 2008 Délegyháza, Hungary Stephen I of Hungary
74[2] 2009 Vincennes

First and Hart streets

Indiana Black Oak Tecumseh

References

Bibliography

Notes

  1. Toth p.5
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Tree trunk to become Tecumseh monument arrives in Vincennes Thursday, Courierpress.com. September 30, 2009. Accessed September 30, 2009
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Trail Leads to Ladysmith Ladysmith Chronicle, September 14, 2009. Accessed October 10, 2009
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Artist's statues honor Indians in all 50 states". Cape Coral Daily Breeze. April 5, 2009. Retrieved December 13, 2009.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Peter Wolf Toth: Sculptures Honor Native Americans, a December 31, 2008 article from Magyar News Online
  6. http://www.dcschumaker.com/default.html
  7. 1 2 3 Stoical 25-year-old reminder of the honor due first peoples, The Boston Globe. August 24, 2008. Accessed December 6, 2009.
  8. Toth p.55
  9. David Schumaker. Missing Statues
  10. Toth p.59
  11. Toth p.68
  12. 1 2 Sculptor casts a GIANT SHADOW.Orlando Sentinel. September 14, 2005. Accessed November 17, 2009
  13. Toth p.70
  14. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number GA000446
  15. Toth p.73
  16. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number AL000264
  17. Toth p.77
  18. Toth p.82
  19. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number NY000873
  20. Toth p.87
  21. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number WV000041
  22. Toth p.90
  23. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number TN000231
  24. Toth p.95
  25. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number 73261502
  26. Toth p.101
  27. Toth p.107
  28. Toth p.112
  29. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number AR000344
  30. Toth p.118
  31. Toth p.123
  32. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number 87730027
  33. Farewell, Whispering Giant
  34. Toth p.129
  35. Toth p.136
  36. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MS000075
  37. Toth p.145
  38. 1 2 Steelman, Ben (1 December 2005). "Sculptor undertakes giant task". Wilmington, North Carolina: Star-News. Retrieved 2016-06-08.
  39. Toth p.150
  40. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number VA000201
  41. Toth p.155
  42. Toth p.159
  43. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MD000432
  44. Toth p.162
  45. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number DE000029
  46. Toth p.166
  47. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number SC000226
  48. Toth p.168
  49. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MO000021
  50. Toth p.172
  51. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MN000342
  52. Toth p.177
  53. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number WI000116
  54. Toth p.187
  55. Toth p.193
  56. Toth p.196
  57. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number KS000486
  58. Toth p.204
  59. Toth p.205
  60. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number CO000512
  61. Toth p.206
  62. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MT000024
  63. Toth p.207
  64. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number AZ000322
  65. Toth p.208
  66. Toth p.214
  67. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number NE000158
  68. Toth p.215
  69. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number WY000053
  70. Toth p.216
  71. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number ID000023
  72. Toth p.217
  73. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number SD000050
  74. Toth p.218
  75. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number ND000040
  76. Toth p.219
  77. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number AK000201
  78. Toth p.223
  79. Peter Toth's Indian Sculpture Meets a Watery Grave Here, The Ogden Reporter. November 3, 1993. Accessed September 30, 2009.
  80. Toth p.224
  81. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number RI000079
  82. Toth p.227
  83. Toth p.228
  84. Toth p.231
  85. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number 87740251
  86. Toth p.232
  87. Wills, Matt, Burlington, Vermont - Toth Indian - Chief Grey Lock. Roadside America. September 11, 2009. Accessed December 12, 2009
  88. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number VT000033
  89. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number NH000283
  90. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MA000063
  91. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number KY000276
  92. "Original Artist, Peter "Wolf" Toth, Travels to Paducah to Stabilize Wacinton". City of Paducah, Kentucky. 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-23.
  93. "Rededication of Wacinton Sculpture Set for Sunday, August 21 at 3 p.m.". City of Paducah, Kentucky. August 19, 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-23.
  94. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number OH000579
  95. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #52 Murray, Utah". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  96. Merrill, Dawn (30 January 2010). "Utah: Chief Wasatch - Peter Toth Carving". Roadsideamerica.com. Retrieved 2016-06-08.
  97. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number NV000190
  98. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #54 Las Cruces, New Mexico". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  99. Junaluska - Trail of Whispering Giants (Dedication plaque affixed to the sculpture). Johnson City, Tennessee. 2016.
  100. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #56 Hillsboro, Oregon". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  101. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number OR000243
  102. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number OR000224
  103. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number HI000012
  104. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number MI000390
  105. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #60 North Bay, Ontario, Canada". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  106. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #61 Ottawa, Illinois". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  107. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number IL000334
  108. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number NC000280
  109. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #64 Concord, North Carolina". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  110. "Mount Pleasant, North Carolina: Buffalo Ranch (Gone)". RoadsideAmerica.com. 2016. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  111. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #65 Williamsport, Pennsylvania". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  112. Smithsonian Art Inventories Catalog Control Number PA001493
  113. Trail of Whispering Giants (pamphlet). Edgewater, Florida: Peter Wolf Toth - Home Studio Museum Art World Gallery. 2008.
  114. Way Marking.com
  115. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #68 Iowa Falls, Iowa". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  116. Schumaker, David (2015). "Original Iowa Falls statue #28". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  117. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #69 Bethany Beach, Delaware". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  118. Schumaker, David (2015). "Original Bethany Beach statue #22". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  119. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #70 Colquitt, Georgia". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-08.
  120. Schumaker, David (2015). "Original Colquitt, Georgia statue #4". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  121. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #71 Buckhead, North Carolina". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-08.
  122. Schumaker, David (2015). "Peter Wolf Toth: Statue #72 Whiteville, North Carolina". David Schumaker. Retrieved 2016-06-08.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.