Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Parents break a world record to honor son

- The State (Columbia, S.C.) (TNS)

CHARLESTON, S.C. – The day before he died, 5-year-old Sam Lee built a fort out of Lincoln Logs.

The notched wooden logs invented more than 100 years ago were more than a childhood building tool for Sam; building things from the logs gave him a sense of accomplish­ment and empowered him, even as a brain tumor slowly killed him.

“He was immobilize­d, (so) he didn’t walk well,” Sam’s father, Michael Lee, told The College Today, a publicatio­n at the College of Charleston, where he is a communicat­ion professor. “So, anything that he could take control over and build that was within his immediate space became a real source of activity for him.”

Legos were too small and difficult for Sam to play with, his mother, Erin Benson, told The State. On March 14, 2017, one year after Sam died, Benson expressed grief in a social media post over her son’s death, and asked for suggestion­s on how to “use this energy.” A friend suggested a Lincoln Log build.

Since then, people around the country have sent Benson more than 30,000 Lincoln Logs – some old, some new.

So, Benson and Lee set out to break the Guinness World Record for the largest Lincoln Log structure to mark the two-year anniversar­y of Sam’s death. With Purpose, a South Carolinaba­sed organizati­on that Benson launched in 2014 to advance treatments for childhood cancer, hosted the build at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

Through 24 hours of building over the course of two days, a team constructe­d a massive fort using 17,504 logs, according to Benson. They broke the previous Guinness World Record of 17,384, but must submit their evidence to be officially certified as the record-holder, which Benson said takes three to five months.

Only one person could build at a time, Benson said. And With Purpose’s architectu­ral partner, Novus Architects, had a team of eight that placed most of the logs.

The purpose of building the massive fort wasn’t to break a record, Benson said, but to get people to stop and ask what they were doing, which allowed Benson to educate them on the amount of funding that childhood cancer research receives.

Only 4 percent of federal government cancer research funding goes to study pediatric cancer, according to the National Pediatric Cancer Foundation.

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