Community Corner

Picture Connecticut: A Sculptor Who Certainly Left His Mark

A carver of Mount Rushmore and Crazy Horse was from Connecticut and is immortalized in one town.

A monument to artist Korczak Ziolkowsky is in West Hartford.
A monument to artist Korczak Ziolkowsky is in West Hartford. (Chris Dehnel/Patch )

WEST HARTFORD, CT — This week's Hidden Gem kind of makes you go "whoa," not only because of a prominent statue, but who carved it and his lasting impact nationwide.

OK ... let's set the stage. You're shopping in the Blue Back Square commercial district in West Hartford. You're at roughly 20 Main St. and gaze toward a set of red brick, traditional New England buildings.

Poof ... there's Noah Webster.

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Most of us know the contributions of Mr. Webster. After all, he essentially taught us how to understand words before we use them. Aside from the statue, his West Hartford home also serves as a testament to his legacy.

Back to the statue ...

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To Webster's left is a monument to Korczak Ziolkowsky, a professional artist who lived from 1908 to 1982.

Ziolkowsky was Born is Boston and was self-taught. He moved to West Hartford and began selling his works throughout New England and, in 1932, gifted the 13-and-a-half-foot Webster statue to the town, a two-year-project.

Then, in 1939, he was living large in South Dakota and assisted Gutzon Borglum with caving Mount Rushmore.

He then returned to South Dakota and initiated the carving of the Crazy Horse Monument that measures 563-feet high and 641-feet long.

The Noah Webster statue. (Chris Dehnel/Patch)

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Picture Connecticut is a weekly series that features images of the state, past and present.
Here are past images:

2024

2023


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