Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Georgia company creates baseball bat in honor of Jackson Sparks, parade victim

- Sophie Carson

A Georgia baseball bat manufactur­er is selling custom bats to honor Jackson Sparks, the 8-year-old Mukwonago boy who was struck and killed in the Waukesha Christmas Parade while he marched with his baseball team.

It is the latest fundraiser amid an outpouring of local and national support for Jackson. All proceeds from sales of the bats will go to his family.

Jackson was the only child to die after a driver plowed his car through the parade Nov. 21, killing six people and injuring more than 60.

Jackson and his 12-year-old brother, Tucker, were both hospitaliz­ed. Jackson died from his injuries two days after the parade.

The idea for the bats came about thanks to an inquiry from Ryan Peterson, a coach with Waukesha Blazers Baseball/Fastpitch Softball Club — the organizati­on Jackson and Tucker played for.

Peterson reached out to bat manufactur­er Dirty South Bats to ask if the company would send a care package to Tucker, an avid user of its bats.

Dirty South Bats, which Peterson said has an “big following in the travel baseball community,” said it could do even better: it could create a limitededi­tion bat as a fundraiser for the Sparks family.

The final design has a black background with “Waukesha” in blue, “Blazers” in white and “#WaukeshaSt­rong” in both colors. The bat also includes a small tribute to Jackson, reading, “In memory of Jackson Sparks #23.”

The bats sell for $395, every dollar of which will be donated. If you order by Dec. 15, the company expects the package to arrive by Christmas.

See details and order a bat at dirty southbats.com/product/waukesha.

“Seeing the bat take shape meant a lot to all of us, and the support that everyone has seen from across the country has been awe-inspiring,” Peterson said.

Last Friday, scores of people across the Milwaukee area and the U.S. donned baseball jerseys to honor Jackson, including high school students, Milwaukee Brewers players and fellow youth baseball families.

A verified GoFundMe for the Sparks family has raised more than $474,000 since it was created.

A GoFundMe page created by the Blazers has raised nearly $30,000. The Blazers organizati­on pledges the money will go toward medical bills for those injured in the parade, mental health resources and counseling for Blazers families, college scholarshi­ps for players, a sponsorshi­p program for children who wouldn’t be able to play due to financial hardship and a permanent memorial for the parade victims.

The Blazers are also selling special “Blazers Strong” T-shirts and sweatshirt­s, with proceeds going to its memorial fund. Order apparel at forms.gle/FCaAgBSUCq­45t7AM8.

 ?? COURTESY OF RYAN PETERSON ?? The baseball bat design will feature a tribute to Jackson Sparks and the #WaukeshaSt­rong message.
COURTESY OF RYAN PETERSON The baseball bat design will feature a tribute to Jackson Sparks and the #WaukeshaSt­rong message.
 ?? ?? Sparks
Sparks

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States