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 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]
As of September 2009 there are eight more Whispering Giants planned.[2]
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The 74 Whispering Giants range from 20 to 40 feet (6.1 to 12 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.[6] Before starting work on a Whispering giant, Toth confers with local Native American tribes and local lawmakers.[6] 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.[6]
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]
# | Date | Location | State/Province | Medium | Approx. Height | Picture/Name | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1[7] | 1972, February | La Jolla | California | Rock beach cliff |
Lost[8] | ||
2[9] | 1972, Summer | Akron | Ohio | Maple | |||
3[10][11] | 1973, January | De Land | Florida | Oak | 7 feet | Lost to rot | |
4[12][13] | 1973, February | Colquitt U.S. Highway 27 |
Georgia | Red Cedar | 18 feet | ||
5[14][15] | 1973, April | Dothan Houston-Love Memorial Library |
Alabama | Oak | 20 feet | Mus-Quoian | |
6[16] | 1973, June | Sharon | Pennsylvania | Elm | 20 feet | ||
7[17][18] | 1973, August | Dunkirk Route 5, Lake Shore Drive West |
New York | Elm | 7.5 feet | Ong-Gwe-Ohn-Weh | |
8[19][20] | 1973, October | Wheeling | West Virginia | Elm | 14 feet | Kanououara | Destroyed by Dutch elm disease |
9[21][22] | 1973, December | Cleveland Johnston Park |
Tennessee | Oak | 10 Feet | Cherokee Chieftain | |
10[23][24] | 1974, January | Punta Gorda Holiday Inn, 300 Retta Esplanade |
Florida | Parota | 15 feet | ||
11[25] | 1974, October | Vancouver | Washington | White Fir | 25 feet | ||
12[26] | 1975, February | New Orleans | Louisiana | Oak | In storage.[5] | ||
13[27][28] | 1975, April | Little Rock |
Arkansas | Oak | 20 feet | ||
14[29] | 1975, June | Fort Wayne | Indiana | 25 feet | Destroyed by termites.[5] | ||
15[30][31] | 1975, August | Lansing |
Michigan | Elm | 29 feet 3 inches | ||
16[32] | 1975, October | Sparland | Illinois | Oak | |||
17[33][34] | 1975, December | Ocean Springs Davidson Park |
Mississippi | Cypress | 27 feet | Crooked Feather | |
18[35] | 1976, March | Wilmington | North Carolina | Oak | |||
19[36][37] | 1976, May | Virginia Beach |
Virginia | Cypress | 24 feet | ||
20[38] | 1976, July | Atlantic City | New Jersey | Tulip Poplar | Missing (status unknown).[5] | ||
21[39][40] | 1976, September | Ocean City South Second Street & Baltimore Avenue |
Maryland | Oak | 20 feet | ||
22[41][42] | 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 2002. |
23[43][44] | 1977, February | Charleston | South Carolina |
Darlington Oak | 24 feet | Landing Brave | |
24[45][46] | 1977, May | St. Louis |
Missouri | Oak | 19 feet | ||
25[47][48] | 1977, July | Two Harbors Information Center 8, Highway 61 East |
Minnesota | Pine | 30 feet | ||
26[49][50] | 1977, September | Hayward |
Wisconsin | Oak | 34 feet | Tribute to the Ojibwe | |
27[51] | 1977, November | Desert Hot Springs Cabot's Pueblo Museum |
California | Sequoia/Cedar | Waokiye | ||
28[52] | 1978, June | Iowa Falls | Iowa | Cottonwood | |||
29[53][54] | 1978, September | Troy Doniphan County Courthouse |
Kansas | Burr Oak | 27 feet |
|
|
30[55] | 1979, May | Broken Bow | Oklahoma | Cypress | |||
31[56][57] | 1979, August | Loveland 2033 Waterdale Drive, Rock Ridge Ranch |
Colorado | Cottonwood | 37 feet | Redman | |
32[58][59] | 1979, October | Red Lodge Red Lodge Library |
Montana | Ponderosa Pine | 25 feet | ||
33[60][61] | Winslow Winslow Visitor Center |
Arizona | Ponderosa Pine | 40 feet | |||
34[62] | 1980, May | Texarkana | Texas | Red Oak | Missing (status unknown).[5] | ||
35[63][64] | 1980, July | Lincoln Lincoln Indian Center |
Nebraska | Cottonwood | 25 feet | ||
36[65][66] | 1980, September | Worland Washakie County Courthouse |
Wyoming | Douglas fir | 20 feet | ||
37[67][68] | 1980, November | Idaho Falls North Tourist Park, Lincoln Road and North Yellowstone Highway |
Idaho | Douglas Fir | 27 feet | ||
38[69][70] | 1981, June | Aberdeen Anderson Park |
South Dakota | Cottonwood | 25 feet | Moved indoors for repair; viewable by appointment.[5] | |
39[71][72] | 1981, August | Mandan Stage Stop, 601 6th Avenue Southeast |
North Dakota | Cottonwood | 25 feet | ||
40[73][74] | 1981, October | Valdez |
Alaska | Sitka spruce | 25 feet | ||
41[75][76] | 1982, May | Osceola | Iowa | Cottonwood | Destroyed in 1993 by winds and flood; replacement created by Jesse Kuhs.[5] | ||
42[77][78] | 1982, July | Narragansett Sprague Memorial Park |
Rhode Island | Douglas fir | 20 feet | Enishkeetompauog Narragansett | |
43[79] | 1982, October | Groton | Connecticut | Douglas fir | In storage.[5] | ||
44[11][80] | 1983, May | Ft. Lauderdale Seminole Indian tribe trading post |
Florida | Cypress | 30 feet | ||
45[81][82] | 1983, August | Plymouth Tourist Information Center, Route 3, Exit 5 |
Massachusetts | Red Oak | 30 feet | Enisketomp | |
46[83] | 1983, October | Bar Harbor | Maine | Elm | |||
47 [84][85] | 1984, July | Burlington Battery Park |
Vermont | Red Oak | 34 feet | Chief Grey Lock | |
48[86] | 1984, September | Laconia Opechee Park |
New Hampshire | Red Oak | 36 feet |
|
|
[87] | 1984, November | Springfield |
Massachusetts | 15 feet | Omiskanoagwiah | ||
50[88] | 1985, May | Paducah Bob Noble Park |
Kentucky | Red Oak | 35 feet | Wacinton | |
51[89] | 1985, August | Akron Fairlawn Elementary School |
Ohio | Red Oak | 30 feet | Rotaynah | |
[90] | 1985 | Salt Lake City City Park |
Utah | Cottonwood | Chief Wasatch | ||
53[91] | 1986 | Reno |
Nevada | 17 feet | Wa-Pai-Shone | ||
57[92] | 1986, August | Las Cruces Apodaca Park |
New Mexico | 20 feet | Dineh | ||
[93] | 1987 | Astoria |
Oregon | Cedar | |||
56.[94][95] | 1987, September | Hillsboro |
Oregon | Douglas Fir | 25 feet |
|
|
58 [96] | 1988, May | Hale'iwa 59-254 Kamehameha Highway, between Sunset Beach and Sunset Beach Elementary School |
Hawaii | Douglas Fir or redwood | 25 feet |
|
|
[97] | 1988, October | Wakefield Dock on Sunday Lake |
Michigan | 20 feet |
|
||
62[98] | 1989 | Utica |
Illinois | Oak | 20 feet | Chief Walks with the Wind | |
[99] | 1989, September | Cherokee Museum of the Cherokee Indian |
North Carolina | 22 feet | Sequoyah |
||
67[100] | 1992 | Winnipeg Beach In the Town Square |
Manitoba, Canada | Cedar | 30 Feet | Anishinaabe | |
[101] | 1990 | Williamsport | Pennsylvania | 24 feet | Woapalanee | ||
73[4][5] | 2008 | Délegyháza, Hungary | Stephen I of Hungary | ||||
74[2] | 2009 | Vincennes First and Hart streets |
Indiana | Black Oak | Tecumseh |