Caverns explorer's statue  awaits unveiling
By Reid Wright
Current-Argus Staff  Writer
Posted: 10/29/2009 09:04:16 PM  MDT
 

CARLSBAD — Jim White has returned to Carlsbad.  
Tucked under blue plastic tarp in a dark corner of a county garage, a 
stately  13-foot-tall bronze statue of the Carlsbad Caverns explorer awaits 
unveiling.  
Sculpted by Reynaldo "Sonny" Rivera, the more than $100,000 statue was a  
project of a Carlsbad arts committee.  
Rocky Hayes, a former Current-Argus publisher and committee member, said  
White's exploration and promotion of Carlsbad Caverns was an example of the  
western spirit and the pioneering spirit of the town.  
"It represents Carlsbad as a western town, as a town settled by people with 
 incredible character," he said, citing the founding of Carlsbad and the  
construction of the first flume across the Pecos River. "To actually 
re-direct  the river to get water over to what little soil there was, to turn 
it 
into this  Garden of Eden, this utopia it means overcoming some tremendous 
challenges."  
Jim White is reported to have been a young cowboy who followed a cloud of  
bats to the entrance of Carlsbad Caverns, which he eventually descended into 
on  a ladder made of sticks and fencing wire to explore.  
"Jim was basically responsible for much of the exploration of Carlsbad  
Caverns and bringing it to the attention of the public and the National Park  
Service," said George Veni, executive director of the National Cave and Karst 
 Institute.  
Veni said it was his first trip into the caverns that inspired him to 
pursue  a career in the research of caves.  
He said the sculptor of the statue was inspired by the story of White. 
 
"He explored the caverns with very limited technology," Veni said. "I think 
 that's a credit to his skill and his courage."  
Hayes said the story of Jim White may be embellished or hypocritical, but 
he  still finds it compelling.  
"That's just a hell of a story," he said. "All I know is that level of  
curiosity, of ruggedness, of bravery to make a real discovery. I find that  
captivating. I think it is worth remembering and is worth memorializing."  
The statue is expected to be unveiled in the coming months, Veni said. It  
will be placed in front of the new Cave and Karst institute which is still 
under  construction, expected to be opened early next year.  
Funding for the statue included $100,000 in state funds made possible by  
legislation passed by then-State Representative Bill Gray and Rep. John 
Heaton  as well as Senators Vernon Asbill and Carroll Leavell. Other funds 
included a  trust fund created by money from Gannett Newspapers, and donations 
by 
author  Bill Coat, Hayes said.  
Committee members included Jim Harrison, Bob Forrest, John Heaton, Jed  
Howard, Larry Henderson, and Jerry Matson. 
_http://www.currentargus.com/ci_13673144_ 
(http://www.currentargus.com/ci_13673144)  

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