The Standard Journal

Work continues on new Walk of Fame park

Statues already removed from county courthouse grounds

- By Jeremy Stewart JStewart @PolkStanda­rdJournal.com

A new destinatio­n for visitors to downtown Cedartown is under constructi­on, but its foundation­s are built on the legacy of the past.

The Polk County Walk of Fame is getting a new home in a public park along Philpot Street next to the Doug Sanders Golf Museum specifical­ly designed for the bronze statues of historical­ly important local sports figures.

Daniel Morris, who serves as executive director of the Cedartown Coca-Cola museum and co-director of the Sanders museum, said the idea of bringing all of the statues from the Polk County Courthouse to a space where they would be presented in a more formal way.

“This will get the statues much closer together and allow people to come out and have a picnic and be able to walk and sit and enjoy them while also having them secured at night,” Morris said.

Primary funding for the park was obtained through the W.D. Trippe Foundation, with Morris’ family helping to orchestrat­e the constructi­on and maintenanc­e of the new park.

The area will include a paved walkway with decorative pavers, a flower garden and landscapin­g throughout, lighting, benches, greenspace, and a perimeter fence. Morris said the park will be open to the public six days a week from dawn to dusk.

All of the statues were removed from the courthouse grounds last week and were prepared to be placed on pedestals. Morris said they hope to have the park completed by January with a rededicati­on next summer, about the time that the newest statue — local civil rights leader and former Cedar Hill High School coach Escue Rogers — is ready to be unveiled.

“It’s an important project for us. We really want to do the families of the people who are honored justice as well as honor the statues themselves. I mean they’re really beautiful pieces of art. So for

us it’s just one more thing that people will be able to do when they come to downtown Cedartown.”

The Polk County Walk of Fame was initially dedicated in 2016 and honors the Polk County citizens who have been inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame for achievemen­ts at the highest levels of sports.

Morris said his family had originally considered constructi­ng the park as part of the Doug Sanders Museum, which opened last August, but didn’t have the time to complete it. The family was able to relocate the Walk of Fame statue of Doug Sanders from the courthouse to a spot just next to the museum before the opening.

“It’s been a concept for about two years and we finally had the time and the resources to get it done,” Morris said. “Thankfully, the W.D. Trippe Foundation is a big supporter of all this and they wanted the idea and from the get go. They wanted a park that would really sort of do justice to the monuments.”

Including Sanders, the Polk County Walk of Fame consists of six statues currently, with Rogers to be added next year. The new park will have 12 pedestals initially to allow for more statues as additional members are included in the future.

“This will be something that the city will have to to enjoy for decades to come, and it will do right by the families of the people who are honored,” Morris said. “It’s impressive that Polk County has so many accomplish­ed

athletes, and this will do their legacy and the statues of them justice.”

The Walk of Fame includes champion Cedartown High School and University of

Georgia coach Doc Ayers, NFL football players Ray Beck and Edgar Chandler, college football coach Jimmy Hightower, and MLB player Whitlow Wyatt.

 ?? Jeremy stewart ?? Crews work to break up the concrete around the statue of Doc Ayers at the site of the new Polk County Walk of Fame park along Philpot Street near downtown Cedartown.
Jeremy stewart Crews work to break up the concrete around the statue of Doc Ayers at the site of the new Polk County Walk of Fame park along Philpot Street near downtown Cedartown.
 ?? Jeremy stewart ?? The bronze statue of Whitlow Wyatt stands near the Doug Sanders Golf Museum near downtown Cedartown while it is prepared it to be placed on one of the 12 pedestals in the new Polk County Walk of Fame park.
Jeremy stewart The bronze statue of Whitlow Wyatt stands near the Doug Sanders Golf Museum near downtown Cedartown while it is prepared it to be placed on one of the 12 pedestals in the new Polk County Walk of Fame park.
 ?? Jeremy stewart ?? A walkway is lined with pedestals where the Polk County Walk of Fame statues will be placed in the new park located along Philpot Street near downtown Cedartown next to the Doug Sanders Golf Museum.
Jeremy stewart A walkway is lined with pedestals where the Polk County Walk of Fame statues will be placed in the new park located along Philpot Street near downtown Cedartown next to the Doug Sanders Golf Museum.

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