World’s Third Bronze Statue of Babe Ruth to Be Unveiled On 128th Birthday in Hot Springs | Sports Destination Management

World’s Third Bronze Statue of Babe Ruth to Be Unveiled On 128th Birthday in Hot Springs

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Oct 14, 2022

On the 128th anniversary of his birth, the world’s third bronze statue of baseball immortal Babe Ruth will be dedicated next year at the main entrance to Hot Springs’ Majestic Park baseball complex, where Ruth played in the early years of the 20th Century.

“Babe’s birthday — February 6 — is the perfect time for Hot Springs to erect this eight-foot bronze statue showing him watching after smashing another home run ball over the fence,” Visit Hot Springs CEO Steve Arrison said. “It will stand at the entrance to the complex, welcoming fans to Majestic Field — Where Baseball's Past Meets Baseball's Future. There are only two other bronze statues of Babe Ruth in the world, one in Japan and one at Camden Yards in Baltimore. Hot Springs’ statue will memorialize him, a baseball immortal who loved coming to Hot Springs for spring training in the early days of the city’s fame as The Birthplace of Major League Baseball Spring Training. It’s fitting that our statue will attract fans to the city where Babe hit his famous 570-foot home run at Whittington Park that sailed across Whittington Avenue and into a pond at the Arkansas Alligator Pond during a spring training game in 1918. He also played and trained at Majestic Park, as did other Hall of Famers such as Jackie Robinson, Hank Aaron and dozens of others. Ruth was born February 6, 1895, and 2023 also marks the 100th anniversary of the New York Yankees’ first World Series Championship as well as the year Yankee Stadium opened. As we say, our great five-field Majestic Park complex, where Hot Springs kids can enjoy playing baseball again and where we have a full schedule of spring and summer tournaments, is Where Baseball's Past Meets Baseball's Future.”

The Babe Ruth sculpture, created by Pennsylvania sculptor Chad Fisher, was funded by Hot Springs residents Dr. Robert Muldoon, M.D., the Hamby Family in honor of the late Daniel B. Hamby Jr., and Lee Beasley.

“These three donors have enabled us to create an artwork that will stand as an object of pride for our city and also as a guiding light for the kids of Hot Springs who will benefit for years to come from the healthy recreational opportunity Majestic Park will provide for them and future generations,” said Minnie Lenox, a member of the board of directors of The Friends of Majestic Park, the private nonprofit organization that led the drive to fund the Babe Ruth statue as well as provide support for the complex. “All Hot Springs residents are grateful to them for their generosity and for their affection for their hometown as shown by their support of this project.”

No public funds were used to fund the statue.

• Dr. Robert T. Muldoon, M.D., Ph.D., graduated from Hot Springs High School in 1984.  Significantly, he received the Sir Thomas J. Lipton Sportsman of the Year Award from the Hot Springs Boys Club, which stood on the site of the current Majestic Park.

He received his bachelor's degree from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and M.D, Ph.D degrees from Louisiana State University Medical Center at Shreveport.  He currently practices at Genesis Blood and Cancer Institute.

"Three generations of the Muldoon family have played and coached on the fields now known as Majestic Park" Dr. Muldoon said.

• The Hamby Family, represented by Scott Hamby, Daniel Banks Hamby III and Maggie Hamby, owns and operates Sigma Supply of North America, which has 351 employees at 13 branch locations spanning the United States.

“Our company was started in my grandfather’s drug store — the Public Drug Store at the corner of Ramble Street and Park Avenue in 1970,” Scott Hamby said. “Hot Springs will always remain our home base.

“Our father, the late Daniel B. Hamby Jr., was one of biggest baseball fans ever, and we are helping fund this landmark artwork at Majestic Park in his honor.”

• Lee Beasley is a lifelong resident of Hot Springs who has over his career created numerous commercial real estate projects as well as many residential rental properties.

He also has developed or acquired multiple restaurants and has a passion for that industry. Through all of his many ventures in real estate and restaurant venues he has created hundreds of jobs in Hot Springs.

“I am very excited about the new Majestic Park baseball complex,” Beasley said. “This is something that will benefit the kids in our area while bringing hundreds of families to our beautiful city that I am so proud of.

“I can remember spending many hours playing baseball on that very site. I am happy that I can be a small part of something that will bring so much joy to kids and families for many years to come.”

The idea for forming The Friends of Majestic Park was that of Mike Dugan, the late Hot Springs resident who was one of the country’s leading baseball historians and the person who led the effort to establish Hot Springs as The Birthplace of Major League Baseball Springs Training. Dugan passed away in early 2021.

“Mike would be thrilled beyond belief to see the installation of the Babe Ruth statue at Majestic Park, which was his fondest dream as a place for Hot Springs kids to enjoy the game that was his great passion in life,” said Susan Dugan, his wife and a member of The Friends of Majestic Park.

Noted Babe Ruth historian Bill Jenkinson, who also was instrumental in researching Hot Springs’ role in baseball history, has been consulting with sculptor Fisher on the statue project to ensure that every detail is accurate.

The sculpture will depict Ruth in his New York Yankees uniform just after he has swung the bat, watching as another home run sails toward the outfield fence. 

Arrison said the statue is certain to become a tourism attraction in its own right.

“Baseball fans from everywhere will come to see this monument to the most famous man who ever played the game,” Arrison said. “It will outlast all of us and stand tall in front of Majestic Park for future generations to remind them of the history of the site and our community.”

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