Arkansas’ Johnny Cash statue on the way to Washington D.C.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – The likeness of Johnny Cash set to live in the U.S. Capitol’s statuary hall is now on its way to D.C.

The bronze statue of Arkansas-born Cash will join another recent addition to the space; Daisy Gatson Bates, who was placed there earlier this year as Arkansas’ newest representation.

“Our hope is that it will encourage people from all around the world who tour the U.S. Capitol to want to come and visit Arkansas,” Arkansas National Statuary Hall Steering Committee Chair Shane Broadway explained.

US Capitol statue of Johnny Cash to be unveiled in late September

Broadway noted that some four million visitors stop by the Capitol per year.

An 18-wheeler carrying the heavily packaged statue of Cash pulled out of Little Rock this morning, but not without ceremony. The send-off ended the five-year process of getting The Man in Black to Washington, bringing in Cash’s Arkansas relatives from Kingsland and the statue’s artist, Kevin Kresse.

“It creeps in occasionally and it does hit me,” Kresse explained when asked about the magnitude of the project. “When he’s fully inside the Capitol safely put together, then I can fully take a deep breath.”

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