The Evening Leader

At divided time, Ohio unites behind statue of John Glenn

-

COLUMBUS (AP) — Political divisions these days may be deep, but Ohioans never cease to agree on John Glenn.

Both Republican­s and Democrats on a state panel heaped praise on the late astronaut and U.S. senator on Thursday, as they voted unanimousl­y to put a 7-foot, 600-pound bronze statue of him on temporary display at the Ohio Statehouse for the next year.

The period beginning next month will include Glenn's 100th birthday this July, as well as the 60th anniversar­y of his famous flight as the first American to orbit Earth next February. The vote was delayed about a year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“We really felt now is the time to seek any way to build unity that we can,” state Rep. Adam Holmes, a Zanesville Republican spearheadi­ng the project, said after the vote. “And this was one of them, someone we can all agree on. He was such a role model.”

Holmes represents a rural Ohio district that includes the towns where Glenn, a Democrat, was born and grew up and said he tries to emulate him.

“I tell people frequently that I would never assume to be like John Glenn,” he told members of the Capital Square Review and Advisory Board, “but I certainly understand where he came from. I certainly understand where his value system, his work ethic and his patriotism came from.”

Rules governing permanent placement of a statue on Statehouse grounds say the person depicted must have been dead at least 25 years beforehand. Glenn died in 2016 at age 95.

Holmes and Laura Battoclett­i, the oversight board's executive director, said the statue could be placed as soon as next week. The sculpture was crafted by Alan Cottrill, who was born and raised in Zanesville, a short drive from New Concord, where Glenn and his late wife, Annie, met and grew up. Annie Glenn died in June of COVID-19. She was 100.

Even as unity around Glenn abounded, signs of the nation’s political tensions were peppered throughout the board’s meeting.

The group discussed whether bulletproo­f glass should be installed on the Statehouse’s first floor to avoid the type of damage experience­d during racial injustice protests this summer, budget increases for added security amid worries following the January insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, and new proposed rules for the removal of historical statues deemed racially or culturally offensive.

State Rep. Erica Crawley, a Columbus Democrat who is Black, lauded Glenn and voted yes on placing his likeness, even as she strongly questioned and voted no on advancing the proposed statue removal rules, which include a minimum fiveyear waiting period.

“This is the type of person, for his work, that we absolutely should be recognizin­g for his contributi­ons to this great state, to our country, and, everyone knows, his contributi­ons to space,” she said, proudly noting she and Glenn were both U.S. Navy veterans.

Battoclett­i recommende­d tweaking Holmes’ proposal to place the Glenn statue outdoors, partly for fear it would be vandalized by demonstrat­ors, who have arisen from both ends of the political spectrum over the past year to stage large Statehouse protests.

“With the unpredicta­bility of our social climate, I can't guarantee the safety of the statue, particular­ly from graffiti," she said. ”We've seen that for the last 10 months."

Battoclett­i said placing the statue indoors, near an existing Great Ohioans exhibit, would also allow it to be used for educationa­l purposes and keep from setting a new precedent for temporary placements, Glenn’s being the first.

A resolution urging Congress to award the Glenns a joint Congressio­nal Gold Medal was reintroduc­ed in the Ohio Legislatur­e last week, after lawmakers failed to act on it last session.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States