Crazy Horse Memorial
Unknown
Updated about 11 months ago
Accessibility
Parking and Drop-Off Areas
- Unknown Accessible parking space8 feet wide for car plus 5-foot access aisle.
- Unknown Accessible parking space accommodates lift-equipped vans8-foot-wide space with minimum 8-foot-wide access aisles, and 98 inches of vertical clearance.
About
Born in 1840 along Rapid Creek, Crazy Horse rose to become one of the most powerful and most recognized Native American figures of the Lakota Indian Tribe, second only to Sitting Bull. Cemented in history as a Native American war leader and fearless defender of Native American culture, territory and life, Crazy Horse has come to represent the freedom of the Native American spirit and the historic, continuing effort to preserve Native American culture within American society. His is an intriguing and vibrant legacy, inspiring the world’s largest mountain carving, currently in progress, right here in the Black Hills of South Dakota.