
Harney Sunset

by Greni Graph
Title
Harney Sunset
Artist
Greni Graph
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Harney Peak is the highest natural point in South Dakota and is located in the Black Elk Wilderness area, in southern Pennington County, in Black Hills National Forest. At 7,242 feet (2,207 m), it is also the highest summit in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains and the highest point in the Black Hills. The peak was named in the late 1850s by Lieutenant Gouverneur K. Warren in honor of General William S. Harney, who was commander of the military in the Black Hills area in the late 1870s. The first European Americans believed to have reached the summit were a party led by General George Armstrong Custer in 1874, during the Black Hills expedition. Custer, along with five other men rode on horseback much of the way, and Custer forced his mount higher after the others in his party had dismounted, which one of the party, engineer W. H. Wood, later described as cruel. Harney Peak is the site of the Sioux Native American Black Elk's Great Vision which he received when nine years old and the site to which he returned as an old man, accompanied by writer John Neihardt, who popularized the medicine man in his book Black Elk Speaks. Neihardt recorded Black Elk's words regarding his vision as follows: 'I was standing on the highest mountain of them all, and round about beneath me was the whole hoop of the world,' he is quoted as saying in Neihardt's book. ' And while I stood there I saw more than I can tell and I understood more than I saw; for I was seeing in a sacred manner the shapes of all things in the spirit, and the shape of all shapes as they must live together like one being.' dakota, light, photography, sunset, harney, harney peak, needles, custer state park, silhouette, south dakota, black hills #201301035425
Uploaded
January 4th, 2013
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Viewed 214 Times - Last Visitor from Kiez, 12 - Germany on 01/21/2023 at 12:25 PM
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Comments (2)

Nadine and Bob Johnston
Personally, prefer landscapes before 10am and after 3pm. But my preference is up to two hours after the light breaks in morning, and the last two hours before it vanishes, at sundown. Congratulations, on your Features, and Its one of my FAVORITE FEATURES of the day. Thank you for your submission to ARTISTS NEWS ...