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Cultural events, places and people in the Little Rock area

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Only one week left to take the Artspace Rocks Artist Market Survey!

Posted on October 28, 2019 by Scott

Image may contain: textThere is only one week left to have your voice heard on the Artspace Rocks Arts Market Survey!

Earlier in 2019, the Windgate Foundation invited Artspace, a national nonprofit leader in the field of affordable creative space development, to explore the feasibility of creating an affordable live/work community in the Little Rock metro region, a region they are calling “The Rocks.”

A series of meetings with the community and local leaders occurred in July and August, setting the stage for this next big step: A Creative Space Needs Survey of creative people, especially those interested in affordable space. Input will help the local stakeholder group and Artspace determine if there is ample need for new space, what type of space to create, what “affordable” means in the community, where to build, and if this idea should be taken to the next step.

Your input is critical to advancing plans for a new, affordable, creative space facility in the Little Rock metro area. A facility where creative people (artists, “creatives”, arts educators/administrators, people who make things, and those who keep alive cultural practices) can have affordable space in which to live and work, create, practice, connect and share with the public.

Please take the survey at https://www.artspace.org/ArtspaceRocks to have your voice heard in this process.

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Posted in Architecture, Civic Engagement, Dance, Design, Film, Food, Government, Literature, Music, Public Art, Theatre, Visual Art | Tagged Artspace, City of Little Rock, Windgate Foundation

Little Rock’s first government created

Posted on October 27, 2019 by Scott

Little Rock started functioning as the capital of Arkansas in June 1821. But by 1825 the settlement known as Little Rock was little more than a loosely defined group of structures. One hundred and ninety-four years ago today, on October 27, 1825, Territorial Governor George Izard signed legislation which started establishing a framework for Little Rock to function as a city.

I refer to this time period as Little Rock’s “Articles of Confederation.”  Like that phase of US governmental history, the trusteeship had limited responsibilities but still laid the groundwork for what would come.

It established that Little Rock citizens could elect a board of trustees to decide matters. Those trustees would choose one of their own to be a presiding officer. Though Little Rock would not be officially incorporated until 1831, this was the first step towards incorporation. The first trustees, elected for 1826, were Robert Crittenden, Joseph Henderson, Nicholas Peay, Bernard Smith and Isaac Watkins. Smith was chosen to be the presiding officer.

Crittenden had been largely responsible for the relocation of the capitol to Little Rock, where he owned a lot of land. He was a major political force in Arkansas politics during the territorial days. Watkins was a nephew of a signer of the Declaration of Independence. He had established the first tavern in Little Rock in 1821 and later he first mill in 1826. He was murdered in 1827 and the perpetrator was never captured.

Peay bought the tavern from Watkins in 1826 and continued in the tavern and hotel business the rest of his life. He later served on the Little Rock City Council and was acting mayor. His son Gordon Neill Peay served as Mayor of Little Rock. The Peay family also cofounded Worthen Bank and Christ Episcopal Church. Members of several branches of Mr. Peay’s descendants including the Worthen and Hurst families remain active in Little Rock affairs.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, LR Look Back | Tagged Bernard Smith, Christ Church, Christ Episcopal Church, City of Little Rock, George Izard, Gordon N. Peay, Howard Hurst, Isaac Watkins, Joseph B. Hurst Sr., Joseph Henderson, Nicholas Peay, Robert Crittenden, Stacy Hurst, Tipton Hurst, Worthen Bank

Central Arkansas Town Hall for Arkansans for the Arts today!

Posted on October 27, 2019 by Scott

Image may contain: textArkansans for the Arts is having regional town halls in each of Arkansas’ eight Arkansas Arts Council Districts.  Today, October 27, at 3pm, the Central Arkansas Town Hall will take place at the Regional Innovation Hub.

ARftA Annual Members’ Meeting 2:00 – 3:00
Networking 3:00 – 3:30
Town Hall 3:30 – 4:30 p.m.

Meet YOUR
District 6 Legislative Arts Caucus members!

• Give your input on the Arts, the Creative Economy, and
the Arts’ impact on Quality of Place in Arkansas.
• Get the latest data and tools for Arts advocacy.
• Socialize over refreshments and libations.
• Everyone is welcome at this free event!
• Art$ Town Hall is immediately following the ARftA

Prior to the Town Hall, the Arkansans for the Arts Annual Membership meeting will take place from 2:00 – 3:00.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government | Tagged Arkansans for the Arts, Legislative Arts Caucus

Artober – Monuments. Jane DeDecker’s EVERY WORD WE UTTER commemorating the Woman’s Suffrage Centennial

Posted on October 26, 2019 by Scott

October is Arts and Humanities Month nationally and in Little Rock. Americans for the Arts has identified a different arts topic to be posted for each day in the month. Today’s feature is Monuments.

Earlier this month, a monument was dedicated in Little Rock which commemorates the Woman’s Suffrage Centennial.  Jane DeDecker’s Every Word We Utter is the centerpiece of a new plaza inside the Vogel Schwartz Sculpture Garden.

DeDecker’s sculpture features Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Stanton Blatch, Alice Paul, and Ida B. Wells, all national leaders in the Women’s Suffrage movement. It also features two Arkansas women who played important roles:  Josephine Miller Brown and Bernie Babcock.

The sculpture is based on the concept of a drop of water not only causing ripples but also rising up again after its impact with the surface. The women are presented in a series of levels, each building on the work done by previous generations.

On the based of the sculpture are engrave the names of other courageous Arkansas women who were part of the decades-long women’s suffrage effort.  These include: Frances Reeve Edmonson Almand, Freda Hogan Amerigner, Dr. Ida Joe Brooks, Mary Ascena Burt Brooks, Anne Wade Roark Brough, Haryot Holt Cahoon, Florence Lee Brown Cotnam, Cate Campbell Cuningham, Eliza Bradshaw Dodge, Mary Fletcher Drennan, Pauline Floyd, Elizabeth Wallin Foster, Minnie Ursula Oliver Rutherford Fuller, Lizzie Dorman Fyler, Mary Knapp, Mary W. Loughborough, Clara Alma Cox McDiarmid, Josephine Irvin Harris Pankey, Charlotte Andrews Stephens, Adolphine Fletcher Terry, and Gertrude Watkins.

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Posted in Arts & Humanities Month, Civic Engagement, Government, History, Public Art, Visual Art | Tagged 19th Amendment, Adolphine Fletcher Terry, Anne Wade Roark Brough, Asa Hutchinson, Bernie Babcock, Cate Campbell Cuningham, Charlotte Stephens, Clara Alma Cox McDiarmid, Eliza Bradshaw Dodge, Elizabeth Wallin Foster, Florence Lee Brown Cotnam, Frances Reeve Edmonson Almand, Frank Scott Jr., Freda Hogan Amerigner, Gov. Charles Brough, Haryot Holt Cahoon, Ida Joe Brooks, Jane DeDecker, Josephine Miller Brown, Josephine Pankey, Lizzie Dorman Fyler, Mary Ascena Burt Brooks, Mary Fletcher Drennan, Mary Knapp, Mary W. Loughborough, Minnie Ursula Oliver Rutherford Fuller, Pauline Floyd, Sculpture at the River Market, Vogel Schwartz Sculpture Garden

Birth of Little Rock’s 52nd Mayor – Pratt C. Remmel

Posted on October 26, 2019 by Scott

One hundred and four years ago today, on October 26, 1915, future Little Rock Mayor Pratt Cates Remmel was born.  He was one of five children of Augustus Caleb and Ellen Lucy Remmel.  His father died when he was five, leaving his mother to raise six children (Gertie, Harmon – also known as Buck, Pratt, Gus, Rollie, and Carrie) by herself.  After graduating from high school in 1933, he received a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Virginia in 1937.  During World War II, he held the rank of Lieutenant in the US Navy.

The Remmel family had long been involved in politics.  A great-uncle had been the GOP nominee for governor and senator as well as serving on the GOP national committee.  Remmel’s father had been the state GOP chair and his mother was the Arkansas Republican national committeewoman for nearly three decades.  In 1938, shortly after returning from college, Remmel ran for the Little Rock City Council but did not win.  In 1940, he became chairman of the Pulaski County Republican Executive Committee. For the next several decades, he held various leadership posts in the GOP at the county, state and national level.

Remmel made his second bid for public office in 1951 when he challenged incumbent LR Mayor Sam Wassell, who was seeking a third term.  Wassell shared the often held belief at the time that the GOP could not win any races in Arkansas because of the aftereffects of Reconstruction.  Remmel ran a vigorous campaign and won by a 2-to-1 margin becoming Little Rock’s first Republican mayor since Reconstruction.  In 1953, he sought a second two year term and was re-elected.  Though he had worked to build the GOP in Arkansas, he did not emphasize party affiliation in this campaign. He stressed he had been “fair to all and partial to none.”  This campaign included a rally which was aired live on six LR radio stations at the same time, a first for Arkansas. He won by over 3,000 votes this time over alderman Aubrey Kerr.

Remmel had been mentioned as a potential candidate for US Senate or Congress in 1954.  Instead, he ran for governor and was defeated by Orval Faubus in his first race for the office.  Remmel did receive more votes for governor than any GOP candidate had since reconstruction.  He is credited with laying the groundwork for the future successful campaigns of Winthrop Rockefeller.

A month before the election in 1955, Remmel announced he would seek a 3rd term as Mayor.  While later admitting he should have stuck with the customary two terms, he also said he ran to give voters an alternative to the Democratic nominee Woodrow Mann.  Mann, like Remmel, was in the insurance business; Remmel considered Mann to have a questionable reputation.  Several statewide Democratic leaders campaigned for Mann, who beat Remmel by 1,128 votes, one of Little Rock’s closest mayoral elections.

As Mayor, Remmel served in leadership positions with the US Conference of Mayors and the Arkansas Municipal League.  It was during his tenure as mayor that the land which is now Rebsamen Golf Course was given to the City.

After he left office, Remmel returned to business interests and staying active in civic affairs.   He was an active leader of First United Methodist Church and Gideons International.  He was a Mason, a Shriner, a member of the American Legion, and the American Red Cross.   Remmel served on the Arkansas River Basin Commission and chairman of the Arkansas Waterways Commission.  In 1996, he was posthumously inducted into the Arkansas River Hall of Fame.

Married for many years to Catherine Couch, the couple had three children, Pratt Jr., Cathie and Rebecca.  Lake Catherine in Arkansas is named for his wife. Remmel Park and Pratt Remmel Road in Little Rock are named for Mayor Remmel.

Mayor Remmel died on May 14, 1991.  He and Catherine (who died in 2006) are buried in Oakland Cemetery.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back | Tagged Aubrey Kerr, Carrie Remmel Dickinson, Catherine Couch Remmel, Cathie Matthews, City of Little Rock, Gertrude Remmel Butler, Little Rock Parks and Recreation, Orval Faubus, Pratt C. Remmel, Rollie Remmel, Sam Wassell, Woodrow Wilson Mann

TR in LR on Oct 25, 1905

Posted on October 25, 2019 by Scott

On October 25, 1905, President Teddy Roosevelt, recently elected to a four year term in his own right, made an appearance in Little Rock.

He was greeted at the train station by Governor Jeff Davis and was the guest of honor in a parade up Main Street to City Park (now MacArthur Park) in where a public meeting was held featuring remarks by the President.  During this remarks, speaking to a largely Democratic crowd, the Republican Roosevelt noted: “The candidate is the candidate of a party; but if the president is worth his salt he is the president of the whole people.”

According to media reports at the time, Main Street from Markham to Tenth was a solid mass of cheering spectators for the parade.  This was the first time a sitting President had spent time in Little Rock away from a train station. The only other incumbent President to visit Little Rock had been Benjamin Harrison, who had made only a brief layover.

Roosevelt would make three more visits to Arkansas.  In 1910, he spoke at the Arkansas State Fair in Hot Springs.  In April and September 1912, he made several campaign stops in the state as he was running to reclaim the presidency, this time heading the Progressive (or Bull Moose) ticket.  Though Roosevelt’s successor, William Howard Taft, would visit briefly once in office and once after leaving office, it would not be until Roosevelt’s cousin Franklin Delano Roosevelt visited in 1936, that another sitting President spent much time in the state after TR’s 1905 visit.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back | Tagged Benjamin Harrison, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MacArthur Park, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft

Artober – Advocacy. Arkansans for the Arts

Posted on October 25, 2019 by Scott

Image may contain: 14 people, people smiling, people standingOctober is Arts and Humanities Month nationally and in Little Rock. Americans for the Arts has identified a different arts topic to be posted for each day in the month.  Next up is Advocacy.

Arkansans for the Arts was founded in 2014 to be a statewide advocacy organization with the purpose to advance the arts, arts education, and the creative economy in Arkansas.

ARftA’s purpose is to serve the people of Arkansas as an independent statewide organization providing leadership focused on the promotion and advancement of the creative economy, on transforming policy in arts education, and uniting the state into one voice with a call to action by policy makers to increase investment in the arts.

After some initial funding from the Arkansas Arts Council, in 2015 Arkansas was selected by Americans for the Arts as one of 10 states to participate in a 3-year pilot project to promote and increase the availability of quality arts education ARftA manages this project with funding from Americans for the Arts and the Windgate Charitable Foundation, as well as from donors.

Garbo Hearne, one of the co-founders of Arkansans for the Arts, serves as the current Chair of the ARftA board.

In 2018, Arkansans for the Arts working with the Arkansas General Assembly launched Arkansas’ first ever Legislative Arts Caucus.  It is comprised of Republicans and Democrats in both the House and Senate.  Each of the State’s eight arts districts (as defined by the Arkansas Arts Council) have legislators who are members of the Legislative Arts Caucus.

 

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Posted in Arts & Humanities Month, Civic Engagement, Government | Tagged Americans for the Arts, Arkansans for the Arts, Arkansas Arts Council, Arkansas General Assembly, Garbo Hearne, Legislative Arts Caucus, Windgate Foundation

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