Platte Mound M
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The Platte Mound M is the letter "M" written using
whitewash Whitewash, or calcimine, kalsomine, calsomine, or lime paint is a type of paint made from slaked lime ( calcium hydroxide, Ca(OH)2) or chalk calcium carbonate, (CaCO3), sometimes known as "whiting". Various other additives are sometimes used ...
ed stones on Platte Mound about four miles east of Platteville,
Wisconsin Wisconsin () is a state in the upper Midwestern United States. Wisconsin is the 25th-largest state by total area and the 20th-most populous. It is bordered by Minnesota to the west, Iowa to the southwest, Illinois to the south, Lake M ...
. It is the largest hillside letter "M" in the world. The letter is high, wide, with legs wide.


History

University of Wisconsin-Platteville students Raymond Medley and Alvin Knoerr worked at a
Colorado Colorado (, other variants) is a state in the Mountain West subregion of the Western United States. It encompasses most of the Southern Rocky Mountains, as well as the northeastern portion of the Colorado Plateau and the western edge of t ...
mine in the summer of 1936, where they saw a large letter "M" on the side of
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in Golden, Colorado that stood for the Colorado School of Mines. They believed that a larger "M" should be written on the Platte Mound to represent Platteville miners. They created the first letter on the mound that winter. They wrote the letter "M" in deep snow, and it was visible for several weeks when a cold spell hit the area. The letter "M" was selected for the School of Mines at the university. Several students who went hiking in the same spot after the snow melted used large rocks to build one leg of a letter "M" while resting. The unfinished letter was so pronounced that engineering department head, H. B. Morrow, declared a field day for the department personnel and engineering students to complete the "M". Seniors surveyed the letter to make sure that it was larger than the "M" in Colorado. Underclassmen constructed the letter using borrowed picks, crowbars, and wheelbarrows from a local
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camp. The letter was constructed from limestone found on the mound. Morrow and other professors drove several miles away to inspect the work from a distance, and they recommended changes to counteract distortion from the slope of the mound. Work was completed about six months later and the letter was celebrated at that year's
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on October 16, 1937. It was lit from a torch that was relayed from the school's Tech building. The illuminated letter was visible from 28 miles away. Before 1940, the letter was lit only for homecoming. After
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, the tradition changed to include lighting the letter on the evening of the spring Miner's Ball. The letter was neglected during World War II when few men were available. Female students noticed the general disrepair of the letter, which led to a custom of cleaning the letter in the fall and whitewashing it in April on the Thursday before the Miner's Ball. ''
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'' reporter Francis Miller attended the April 29, 1949 lighting, where he witnessed 250 quart cans with corncobs lit around the outline of the letters. It took 23 minutes to relay the torch to the mound. His story appeared in ''Life'' on May 23, 1949. Platte Mound is a one mile long and half mile wide mound that rises above its surroundings. The college had received permission to construct the letter from property owner William Snow. A Mr. Clausen from
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, who later purchased the land, then donated it to the Board of State College Regents. The letter has been maintained by engineering students at the university since the mining engineering department closed in the 1990s. As of 2008, the Society of Automotive Engineers student organization at UW-Platteville performs all annual maintenance, including brush and tree removal in fall, lighting it for Homecoming in fall with fiberboard wicks in coffee cans of kerosene, and whitewashing it in spring.


See also

* Platte Mound M is at coordinates * Hillside letters


References

{{Commons category Wisconsin culture Buildings and structures in Lafayette County, Wisconsin Geoglyphs Hill figures in the United States Tourist attractions in Lafayette County, Wisconsin University of Wisconsin–Platteville