The Black Hawk War of 1832 between United States forces and the American Indians who called the land home, is considered the last Indian war east of the Mississippi. The leader of this push against expansion, Chief Black Hawk, is honored by a monolithic statue known as The Eternal Indian, even if it is not modeled after him.
Plans for the cement obelisk were began in 1908 by sculptor Lorado Taft and the Eagle's Nest Art Colony. As Taft and others stood on the bluff where the statue now stands, arms folded in contemplation they were said to have been reminded of the American Indians that once stood, looking out over the same bluff. To honor their legacy, they created The Eternal Indian, otherwise known as the Black Hawk Statue. First making smaller mock ups of the piece before building the tall concrete figure, the monolith was finally completed in 1911.
Standing around 50 feet tall from the base to the top of the figure's head, the statue seems to be a featureless cement tower until the top portion when it transitions into a likeness of an American Indian wrapped in a blanket. While the tall spire is hollow, the concrete is as thick as three feet deep in some places. It can be entered via a door in the base, but the interior is off limits to visitors.
At the 1911 inauguration of the sculpture, Taft said that the piece had been inspired by Sauk leader Chief Black Hawk, namesake of the 1832 war of the same name, but the sculptors did not intentionally base the figures likeness on any one figure.
Today the tall spire still stands in Lowden State Park, but it has fallen into a fair amount of disrepair with the cement chipping in a number of places, although restoration efforts have begun as of 2015.