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question everything

(51,901 posts)
Mon Feb 16, 2026, 11:05 PM 11 hrs ago

What 42 massive and decaying presidential heads say about America - WaPo

(snip)

“The Presidents Heads,” a private collection of every ex-POTUS’s sculpted likeness from Washington to George W. Bush. They’re arranged in haphazard rows, with Andrew Jackson occupying a prime front spot simply because the owner likes his hair. The vibe is Stonehenge-meets-“The Walking Dead.”

Before they started sinking into the ground, the busts fashioned from concrete, plaster and rebar — was that Styrofoam poking through some cranial holes? — stood about twice the height of a basketball hoop. They each weighed at least five tons. Time has not been kind. Chester A. Arthur’s entire jaw is missing. Ulysses S. Grant has lost a chunk of his right eyebrow. And Franklin D. Roosevelt was “scalped” in transit, the tour guide noted, by a Route 199 overpass.

These commanders in chief weren’t supposed to spoil. They were carved with patriotic love by a Texas sculptor who studied in Paris under a French modern master. They were the polished centerpieces of a $10 million park that in 2010 went bankrupt after six years. Not enough admirers wanted to see them back when they were pristine.

(snip)

The late sculptor, David Adickes, was an Army veteran who’d wanted his stony visages to gleam. On an early-aughts trip to Mount Rushmore, he’d contemplated the granite mugs of Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln and thought: Why stop at four? Adickes, who died last year at 98, hoped the 42 statues he chiseled at his Houston studio would land in the nation’s capital, he said on a 2022 podcast, but real estate was too costly. So in 2004, he and a business partner settled on a plot near Colonial Williamsburg, aiming to draw history buffs and stroller-pushing families. The Great Recession, overpriced tickets and poor marketing dashed that vision.

After the busts went bust, a rental car company purchased Presidents Park and hired local builder Howard Hankins to help flatten it into a parking lot. “I just couldn’t see crushin’ ’em,” Hankins recalled. Instead, he loaded the abandoned dignitaries onto a fleet of flatbed trucks and escorted them (minus their pedestals) to his farm-slash-industrial dump. Storing them in a muddy field was meant to be temporary, he insisted. A presidential fanatic, Hankins envisioned building a new museum. But the 11-mile move alone cost him $50,000, he said. A decade and a half later, the idea exists only on drawings.



https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=&w=1440&impolicy=high_res

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https://wapo.st/4tBnyNG

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What 42 massive and decaying presidential heads say about America - WaPo (Original Post) question everything 11 hrs ago OP
What a hoot LearnedHand 11 hrs ago #1
kind of a 'murkin terra cotta army rampartd 7 hrs ago #2
I'm reminded of Easter Island and the moai. Buns_of_Fire 7 hrs ago #3

rampartd

(4,359 posts)
2. kind of a 'murkin terra cotta army
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 03:14 AM
7 hrs ago

with styrofoam leaking from the hole in jfk's head?

how could that 98 year old man move those huge stones? could have been aliens?

Buns_of_Fire

(19,069 posts)
3. I'm reminded of Easter Island and the moai.
Tue Feb 17, 2026, 03:39 AM
7 hrs ago

Fat Hitler would approve, provided they were all statues of him.
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