
City Hall circa 1908
On April 6, 1908, the first City Council meeting took place in the new Little Rock City Hall. Located at the corner of Markham and Broadway Streets, this three story structure was designed by Charles L. Thompson.
The idea of a new City Hall had first been raised by Mayor W. E. Lenon in 1904. After a couple of false starts and delays, the project finally got underway in the autumn of 1906. (The date on the front of the building is the optimistic and ultimately wrong 1907. But it is etched in stone and set into the exterior.)
City offices started moving in during January and February 1908 while construction continued. By the end of March, the building was complete and all offices moved in. The final City Council meeting in the 1868 City Hall took place on March 30. One week later, the body reassembled in their new space.
All sixteen of the aldermen were present for this meeting, which was a rare occurrence. The regular order of business was dispensed with except for approval of payments for the bills and payroll for March. That totaled $25,719.56. (This is the equivalent of $664,729.65 in 2018).
The floor was then turned over to Mayor Lenon to make an announcement. In his remarks, the Mayor praised the new building, and then stated he was resigning immediately. His business interests were such that he did not have time to be mayor.
The Council reluctantly accepted the resignation. Because there was over a year remaining in the term, a special election would need to be called to select a successor. If Mayor Lenon had waited two more weeks to resign, the Council would have appointed a new mayor for the duration of the term.
Alderman John Herndon Hollis was chosen to serve as mayor until the special election could be held. First elected in 1904, he was about to start his third term as an alderman. Though he did not have to give up his seat (and in fact served as an alderman until 1918), he was referred to as Mayor Hollis during his brief tenure. He is counted as one of Little Rock’s mayors. Unlike other times where there was an acting mayor while a mayor was out of town, in 1908, there was no other mayor for whom Mayor Hollis was acting in absentia.
After the selection of the new mayor, a committee was appointed to draft a resolution praising retiring Mayor Lenon. The final business at the meeting was the reading of a resolution memorializing longtime City Clerk H. Clay Jones. The former city official had died in March.