Johnny Cash statue hits US Capitol | Inquirer Entertainment

Johnny Cash hits US Capitol as state replaces statues

/ 01:43 PM April 19, 2019

Johnny Cash hits US Capital

Music legend Johnny Cash will be immortalized with a statue in the US Capitol as his native state of Arkansas replaced divisive figures associated with white supremacy. Image: AFP

Music legend Johnny Cash will be immortalized with a statue in the U.S. Capitol as his native state of Arkansas replaced divisive figures associated with white supremacy.

Each US state sends two sculptures to the Statuary Hall, a grand gallery leading to the Capitol’s Rotunda, and the century-old representatives of Arkansas have become increasingly controversial amid a nationwide push to bring down symbols of the racist Confederacy.

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Arkansas announced that one of its two statues — traditionally in white marble — would depict “Man in Black” Cash, whose songs of outlaws, prisoners and his own spiritual journey, sung in a forbidding baritone to a hard-edged country guitar, made him an icon across genres.

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Cash, who died in 2003 in Nashville, will be joined in the Statuary Hall by Daisy Bates, a crusading African American civil rights journalist, after a vote by the Arkansas Senate.

Bates helped guide the Little Rock Nine, black students who defied threats and enrolled in an all-white school in the Arkansas capital in 1957 after president Dwight Eisenhower ordered the 101st Airborne Division to enforce a Supreme Court decision.

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Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, a conservative Republican, hailed Bates as an inspiration and called civil rights “an essential part of our story that says much about courage and who are as a state.”

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He did not directly disassociate Arkansas from the two existing figures honored at the Capitol but said in a weekly address, “Most everyone who was involved in the discussion agreed we needed to update the statues with representatives of our more recent history.”

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The statues to be removed depict James Paul Clarke, a US senator and Arkansas governor who strongly pushed segregation a century ago, and Uriah Rose, a lawyer who backed the Confederacy. CC

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TAGS: Arkansas, Johnny Cash, Memorial, sculptures, white supremacy

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