It appears that you're using a severely outdated version of Safari on Windows. Many features won't work correctly, and functionality can't be guaranteed. Please try viewing this website in Edge, Mozilla, Chrome, or another modern browser. Sorry for any inconvenience this may have caused!
Read More about this safari issue.Standing in the Union County Sports Hall of Fame reminded me of cheering from the stands for my high school’s football team. Looking around at the letterman jackets, the signed footballs and the photos of the inductees into the hall of fame transported me back to classes with the football players and how they were so fun-loving and ready to take the field, no matter the outcome.
I imagine others passing through the Hall of Fame having their own memories brought to the surface. Maybe they played sports, or maybe they didn’t. Either way, the museum speaks to the history of the area and those who broke barriers in sports in Arkansas’s largest county by area.
It is nice that someone wanted to do this for the athletes. One someone who helped do this for the athletes is Randy Ross of El Dorado. He is the vice president and primary researcher for the nonprofit museum.
Ross said that Dallas County had created their Sports Hall of Fame in Fordyce and he thought it would be nice if Union County had one too. He said he started calling retired coaches, retired teachers connected to sports, newspaper sports editors and any he thought interested representing all the schools in Union County. This includes El Dorado, Parkers Chapel, Smackover, Norphlet, Strong, Calion and Junction City.
He found enough like-minded individuals that by the summer of 2010, the organization formed. In 2011, Ross said they held their first Induction Banquet where eight were inaugurated; of which seven are members of the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame. Mr. Ross said they have now inducted close to 40.
By 2013, they had a place to display the photographs of those inducted, along with signed memorabilia from those living and family keepsakes of those honored posthumously. The museum’s first five years were spent in El Dorado’s Downtown Square area where it was open three days a week. Today the museum is located in the South Arkansas Historical Preservation Society’s Gallery, celebrating its first year there in May.
In addition to the collection they currently have, Mr. Randy said that they are still looking for items from the 1950s and before. “It is pretty easy to get the information from the recent years,” he said, “but it is harder to get the older stuff.”
Among the collection of sports paraphernalia, they have a white sweater with a red A belonging to Sam Coleman of Strong. It is the oldest item in the museum. The freshman sweater dates back to 1921 when Sam played his first of four years for the Arkansas Razorbacks. The sweater is on loan from Coleman’s family as long as there is a museum, Mr. Randy told me.
Mr. Randy went on to tell me that Coleman was not the first, nor the last Coleman family member to play for the Razorbacks. In 1917 his older brother began his four years with the Hogs, and another brother followed Sam to start his four years with the Razorbacks in 1925. “For 12 straight years, there was a Coleman brother playing for the Razorbacks,” Mr. Randy told me proudly.
He is also proud of what the organization has accomplished and what the people of Union County have accomplished in the sports area. “The people we’ve inducted include those also in the College Hall of Fame, the Baseball Hall of Fame, the Basketball Hall of Fame, the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame, the National Football Hall of Fame and the Canadian Hall of Fame,” he told me with pride in his voice.
He is also pretty proud that the museum has had visitors from 30 states, three foreign countries and 40 different communities in Arkansas. You can visit the Union County Sports Hall of Fame museum at the South Arkansas Historical Museum Gallery located at 412 East Faulkner in El Dorado. To reach them by phone, dial 870-862-9890.
Leave a Comment
Sign up for our weekly e-news.
Get stories sent straight to your inbox!
[…] Smead Powell Jolley was a phenomenal hitter. Perhaps he was one of the greatest hitters of all time and certainly one of the premier sluggers of his era. Although his name will never be found among the baseball greats enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame., he was elected to the PCL Hall of Fame in 2003 and the Union County, Arkansas, Hall of Fame in 2013. […]