The Cabin Home (Part 2)
by Denyce Cribbs
by Denyce Cribbs
In my last post, I wrote about a booklet I found in our
library called, Pictorial History of The Cabin Home in Garden of Eden, written
by S.P. Dinsmoor. Dinsmoor built a stone
cabin in 1907, along with a sculpture garden, on his property of Lucas,
Kansas. I was curious to find out what
happened to the property after he passed away.
Samuel Perry Dinsmoor
(1843 – 1932)
First, I was surprised to find that the booklet is still
available on Amazon, in very limited quantities. Surely, one of the first examples of
“self-publishing” during its time, it survives as a self-published paperback in
the modern age.
Also, I found that the property does indeed survive
today. In fact, the sculpture gardens
are on the National Register of Historic Places. Tours are offered for $6 per
person (well over the $1 fee that Dinsmoor called for in his will, and wrote
about in his book). According to the Kansas Sampler Foundation website, (http://www.kansassampler.org/8wonders/artresults.php)
Dinsmoor’s Cabin Home survives as one of the “Top 8 Wonders of Kansas
Art.” The website describes The Cabin
Home currently:
The Garden of Eden is a world-renowned
grassroots art site with one of the most fascinating (and bizarre) sculpture
gardens in the world!
In 1907, at the age of 62, Civil War veteran Samuel Perry Dinsmoor began construction of this unusual site by building a structure of limestone logs, (some up to 21 feet long) for the family home. Then, using 113 tons of cement, Dinsmoor built 40-foot tall trees to hold his larger than life figures for his sculpture garden. He stopped working on the sculpture in 1929 because he went blind.
Tour guides help observers become fully aware that every part of every cryptic sculpture has meaning about Populist politics, modern civilization, and the Bible that connect like a dot-to-dot puzzle. The humor and message that he conveys through the sculptures amazes visitors.
Dinsmoor also built a mausoleum to house his mummified remains! Always a jokester, he claimed he would wink at anyone who paid to tour the garden. His vision was accurate and today the Garden of Eden supports itself through admissions. While Dinsmoor was building and creating locals tried to run him out of town. Decades later, the Garden of Eden became the town's main attraction and today Lucas is known as the Grassroots Art Capital of Kansas.
In 1907, at the age of 62, Civil War veteran Samuel Perry Dinsmoor began construction of this unusual site by building a structure of limestone logs, (some up to 21 feet long) for the family home. Then, using 113 tons of cement, Dinsmoor built 40-foot tall trees to hold his larger than life figures for his sculpture garden. He stopped working on the sculpture in 1929 because he went blind.
Tour guides help observers become fully aware that every part of every cryptic sculpture has meaning about Populist politics, modern civilization, and the Bible that connect like a dot-to-dot puzzle. The humor and message that he conveys through the sculptures amazes visitors.
Dinsmoor also built a mausoleum to house his mummified remains! Always a jokester, he claimed he would wink at anyone who paid to tour the garden. His vision was accurate and today the Garden of Eden supports itself through admissions. While Dinsmoor was building and creating locals tried to run him out of town. Decades later, the Garden of Eden became the town's main attraction and today Lucas is known as the Grassroots Art Capital of Kansas.
The Cabin Home Today
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