Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
- In Croaker, Virginia, decaying statues of presidential heads regularly attract tourists.
- Since Presidents Park in Williamsburg closed in 2010, the statues have sat on private property.
- Tours of the statues are offered periodically, and their home may get a makeover in the future.
Every year, over 2 million visitors flock to Mount Rushmore to see the heads of Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt, and Lincoln, according to the National Park Service.
But more than 1,500 miles away, another set of presidents' heads has unexpectedly become a tourist destination in its own right.
In Croaker, Virginia, about 10 miles north of Williamsburg, 42 presidential statues have been sitting on private land for over a decade, crumbling and decaying from the elements. The 15- to 20-foot-tall busts were initially an attraction at a park in Williamsburg that closed in 2010. They would've been destroyed, had a man named Howard Hankins not saved them.
Now, in partnership with photographer John Plashal, Hankins periodically offers tours of the heads on his property, as he hopes to do his part to preserve history. And while the heads still sit in disarray, their fate could soon change with a potential rezoning project.
See the story behind the crumbling heads and how they've gained a second life as a tourist destination.