‘Hello, I’m Johnny Cash’: Statue of the ‘Man in Black’ unveiled at the Capitol
WASHINGTON — Among the white marble statesmen and bronze war heroes who stand silent sentinel through the halls of the Capitol, a musician arrived Tuesday. It was Johnny Cash, the “Man in Black” who built his fame singing about, and for, outlaws and the things love and cocaine will do to a man.
The bronze statue by Arkansas-based sculptor Kevin Kresse shows a young Cash, pensively looking down at his feet as he walks forward, a guitar slung on his back and his left hand on the strap, as if he’s just taken the stage — perhaps at San Quentin prison — to approach the microphone, swing his six-string around, and start the show like he always did: “Hello, I’m Johnny Cash.”
ADVERTISING
It joins the Capitol’s National Statuary Hall Collection, but this man in bronze will not walk the line that tour guides so often do. Instead, it will stay in the Capitol Visitor Center, standing near Utah’s Philo T. Farnsworth, the “Father of Television.”
Arkansas will remain represented in the old House chamber by its other new statue, unveiled in May, of civil rights leader and organizer of the Little Rock Nine, Daisy Bates. The pair replaced Arkansas’ two previous sculpted delegates, Uriah Milton Rose and James Paul Clarke. While Rose opposed secession, he remained loyal to Confederate Arkansas during the Civil War, and Clarke’s own descendants have denounced his virulently racist views.
The decision to replace the two with Cash and Bates was made in 2019 when the Arkansas state legislature passed a bill, which then-governor Asa Hutchinson signed.
According to Speaker Mike Johnson, Cash is the first professional musician to be memorialized at the Capitol. He is also, presumably, the first man arrested at the U.S.-Mexico border for drug smuggling to receive that honor, something Johnson left out of his remarks.
Johnson did, however, note that more than 100 Cash family members were in attendance for the packed ceremony, including, it turns out, himself.
“My staff ran a genealogy report,” Johnson said. “I’m the half fifth cousin four times removed of Johnny Cash.”
Cash’s Grammy-award-winning daughter, Rosanne, delivered a speech on behalf of the family. “I am very careful not to put words in his mouth since his passing, but on this day, I can safely say that he would feel that of all the many honors and accolades he received in his lifetime, this is the ultimate,” she said.
“He was a flawed but profoundly humble, kind and compassionate man with a magnificent generosity of spirit, who loved those who suffered because he knew great suffering and loss,” she said.