From Deseret News archives:
Scout project larger than life
He has raised $12,000 so far over a third of the goal and has high hopes to get the rest.
"It does sound very ambitious," said Kay Godfrey, spokesman for the Great Salt Lake Council of the Boy Scouts.
Rich Hawkes, the district executive for the south Davis County area of Scouting, said it certainly ranks as one of the most ambitious Eagle projects he's ever known.
Utah sculptor Stanley J. Watts is creating the statue. He's best known for National Fallen Fire Fighters 9/11 Memorial in Emmetsburg, Pa., that was created from the famous picture of the three firemen raising the flag on the rubble of the fallen World Trade Center.
When completed the Boy Scout statue will sit in Hogan Park, 720 W. 1500 South, by the Woods Cross City Building.
The statue is from a sketch that Boy Scouts founder Baden Powell made of a Scout in the group's earliest years.
Smith said he noticed that another Scout in Woods Cross had helped put up three plaques to honor veterans at Woods Cross City Hall as his Eagle project. He decided he wanted to do something inspiring like that.
So, he started looking around.
"I wanted to do a monument," he said.
Soon after, he found the sketch Powell had done on the cover of a pamphlet called "Boy's Life," in 1907.
"We searched for sculptors and checked on prices," Smith said. As it ended up, Watts was an easy choice.
"He dropped the price," Smith said. "Also, he doesn't do unfulfilling projects."
The Eagle project was officially started on Nov. 20, 2007. Smith has no deadline but hopes he can get all the funding before he turns 18.
He created a flier and got 47 individuals to donate to the sculpture. Now he's working the business angle and searching for donations from there. He's also gotten support from a lot of boys in his troop.
Anyone wanting more information about the project can contact Ron Smith, Tommy's father, at 688-2633.
E-mail: lynn@desnews.com













