Unveiling of Statue Honoring SEC Trailblazers Set for Sept. 22

JRowland

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May 29, 2001
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LEXINGTON, Ky. – The statue honoring the four players who broke the color barrier in Southeastern Conference football – Nate Northington, Greg Page, Wilbur Hackett and Houston Hogg – will be unveiled at an event at the site of the statue on Sept. 22 at 7 p.m. The event will be open to the public.

The statue commemorates the playing careers and lives of the first four African-American football players in SEC history. It will be located on a pedestal in the plaza between the new Kentucky Football Training Facility and Commonwealth Stadium, positioned to remind fans, coaches and players of the incredible contributions made by Northington, Page, Hackett and Hogg to the University of Kentucky, the SEC and college football on a national level.

“No four players in our program’s history have better demonstrated the values of courage, determination and selflessness than Nate, Greg, Wilbur and Houston,” Athletics Director Mitch Barnhart said. “The pride we take in calling them Kentucky Wildcats is matched only by our gratitude for what they have done for this university and for college football in the South. We are proud to show that appreciation with the dedication of this statue that will occupy a prominent place at the home of Kentucky football.”

Cast in bronze, the statue features the four pioneers in uniform standing side by side. It was designed and sculpted by J. Brett Grill over the course of a year and after interviews with the three living trailblazers; Page’s brother, Melvin; and teammates of the four. The statue is to scale, with the tallest figure standing approximately seven-and-a-half feet tall. It is 11 feet wide at its base and four feet in depth, weighing around 3,500 pounds.

This year marks the 50th anniversary of Northington and Page’s arrival on the UK campus in 1966. Hackett and Hogg would join them a year later. Northington made his varsity debut on Sept. 23, 1967 against Indiana before breaking the SEC’s color barrier a week later when UK hosted Ole Miss on Sept. 30, 1967. Tragically, Page – Northington’s close friend – passed away just a day prior on Sept. 29 after suffering a neck injury in a practice accident. Hackett and Hogg would carry on Northington and Page’s legacy, with Hackett becoming the SEC’s first African-American team captain in any sport in 1969.

Kentucky football’s 2016 schedule poster also paid homage to the trailblazers, with four current players reenacting the poses from the statue and wearing the same numbers Northington, Page, Hackett and Hogg wore as Wildcats. The theme of the poster is “Make a Stand,” a nod to Northington, Page, Hackett and Hogg’s resolve in integrating SEC football.
 
Oct 1, 2001
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Always negative. This board continues to dig deeper into deprivation and self pity by posters who represent less than .05% of the fan base. Would it be too much to honor these player pioneers regardless of when the ceremony was held. To the few of you whose life schedule doesn't meet with UK athletics schedule, feel free to voice your displeasure to the AD.
 
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NCukcat62

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Jul 22, 2007
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Always negative. This board continues to dig deeper into deprivation and self pity by posters who represent less than .05% of the fan base. Would it be too much to honor these player pioneers regardless of when the ceremony was held. To the few of you whose life schedule doesn't meet with UK athletics schedule, feel free to voice your displeasure to the AD.
How are they being negative? They are stating that there would be a lot more people seeing the unveiling on a Saturday
 

1Blouman

All-Conference
Aug 21, 2010
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Oh good. We finally got a statue. Somebody go tear the goal posts down.