Little Rock’s 70th mayor, Sharon Priest, celebrates her birthday on September 12.
She began her public service at the grassroots level when she led the effort to bring flood relief to Southwest Little Rock and Pulaski County following the devastating flood of 1978 that killed 13 people in central Arkansas.
Sharon was appointed to the Little Rock City Beautiful Commission. Following that, she challenged an incumbent City Director and won her first elective office in 1986. In January 1989, she was named Vice Mayor of Little Rock by her colleagues on the City Board. Two years later, she was selected Mayor becoming only the second female to serve as Mayor of Little Rock. During her service to the City of Little Rock, she spearheaded the effort to create a Little Rock flag. At the conclusion of her second four year term on the City Board, she decided to run for Secretary of State.
In November 1994, she elected Secretary of State, becoming the first woman to be elected to that position in Arkansas. She was reelected in 1998. In the summer of 2000, she became President of the National Association of Secretaries of State. After the 2000 presidential election, she was thrust into the forefront of the movement toward election reform. Priest testified before U.S. House and Senate Committees on election reform. As Secretary of State, restoring the Governor’s Reception Room and the Old Supreme Court Chamber of the State Capitol to their original splendor and restoring the rotunda marble are a few of her proudest achievements.
In January 2003, Priest was selected to serve as Executive Director of the Downtown Little Rock Partnership. She served in that capacity until early 2015. She has also been a leading champion for the redevelopment of MacArthur Park, the City’s oldest park