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Redmond to Bend, Oregon, Driving Tour
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Petersen Rock Garden is a historic roadside tourist attraction and museum between Redmond and Deschutes. It is named after its creator, Rasmus Petersen (1883-1952), who was farmer, master craftsman, and a native of Denmark. The site consists of several sculptures, replica buildings, and bridges made out of rocks, shells, glass, obsidian and petrified wood that Petersen started building when he was 52 (he also collected minerals, fossils, geodes, crystals, and semi-precious stones). These structures are fine examples of art and landscape architecture, combining European, American, and vernacular folk art traditions. For this reason the garden was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2013. Highlights of the site include a replica Statue of Liberty and a U.S. Capitol building.

Petersen Rock Garden is a unique historical site in Oregon, featuring sculptures, bridges, and replica buildings made with rocks, shells, glass, obsidian, and petrified wood.

Petersen Rock Garden is a unique historical site in Oregon, featuring sculptures, bridges, and replica buildings made with rocks, shells, glass, obsidian, and petrified wood.

Ramus Petersen was born in Denmark in 1883 and immigrated to America in 1901 when he was 18 (one of his brothers came as well). He enrolled in the Nysted Folk School, a Danish-American school that was located in Nebraska. Four years later, Petersen acquired a homestead (where the rock garden is now) and started farming. He became successful, raising various types of crops and livestock, and expanded his property to three times its initial size to 256 acres. His stature in the community grew as well. He co-founded a community hall and local grange was a member of several boards.

Petersen started collecting rocks and building the garden in 1935. In the coming years he also began to sell off his land and only had twelve acres by the early 1940s. Almost immediately people began to visit the garden; in 1938, over 7,000 people visited. He built the museum building in 1941, which houses the geodes, semi-precious stones, minerals and other specimens Petersen collected, including a 500-pound quartz crystal from Arkansas. Petersen expanded the garden until he passed away in 1952. His grandchildren have continued to operate the garden but in recent years it has fallen on hard times and is in need of repair.

Hale, Jamie. "Petersen Rock Garden is still surviving, but in a state of disrepair." The Oregonian. October 10, 2017. Last Updated May 17, 2019. https://www.oregonlive.com/travel/2017/10/petersen_rock_garden_is_still.html.

Oregon State Historic Preservation Office staff & Hall, Michael. "Petersen Rock Garden." National Park Service - National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form. October 30, 2013. https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/01f7b85c-20b3-4226-bb58-b2a4388309a2.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

All images via Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Petersen_Rock_Garden