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Cultural events, places and people in the Little Rock area

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Category Archives: Civic Engagement

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New sculpture in Hillcrest celebrates COMMUNITY

Posted on December 28, 2019 by Scott

Earlier in December, Clay Enoch’s COMMUNITY sculpture was dedicated in Hillcrest at the Allsopp Promenade along Kavanaugh.  It was placed there through a collaboration of the Hillcrest Residents Association, Hillcrest Merchants Association, and Sculpture at the River Market.  CIty Directors Kathy Webb and Dean Kumpuris, along with the City’s Parks and Recreation Department, also were involved in the project.

The sculpture depicts a variety of people engaged in numerous activities. While each may be doing their own thing, they come together to represent a collective body.  Among the activities represented are biking, playing basketball, studying, playing a cello, and family units spending time together.

Enoch, a member of the National Sculptors’ Guild, is a native of Memphis. His UNITED sculpture was dedicated on the front lawn of Central High School in September 2017, in conjunction with the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the integration of Little Rock Central HIgh School.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, Public Art, Visual Art | Tagged Clay Enoch, Dean Kumpuris, Hillcrest, Hillcrest Merchants Association, Hillcrest Residents Association, Kathy Webb, Little Rock Central High School, National Sculptors' Guild, Sculpture at the River Market

On Boxing Day – a look back at Muhammad Ali in Arkansas

Posted on December 26, 2019 by Scott

Boxing Day has nothing to do with pugilism. But it is a fun day to recall some boxing-related stories in Little Rock history that are related to the sport.

Dan T. Sprick was a Little Rock Mayor for two years in the 1940s after having previously served on the City Council.  From 1961 until 1970, he served as a State Senator from Little Rock and was a reliable ally for Governor Orval Faubus. Once Faubus left office and was replaced by Governor Winthrop Rockefeller, Sprick continued to wave the banner of segregation and agitation.  One of his new focuses was boxer Muhammad Ali.

In 1969, the University of Arkansas announced that Ali would be one of the speakers for its public appearance series.  After refusing to be drafted and go to Vietnam, Ali was barred from earning a living as a professional boxer and so was making a living giving lectures.  His refusal to submit to the draft was based on his religious beliefs as a recent convert to the Nation of Islam.

Opposition to Ali’s appearance rose almost immediately, and from Little Rock not Fayetteville. The Pulaski Businessman’s Association sent a letter to UA president David Mullins asking him to bar Ali from speaking. President Mullins insisted that he had the right to speak on campus. When that didn’t work, Senator Sprick and his cohorts in the state’s upper chamber went to work. A resolution calling for Ali to be barred from speaking failed on a voice vote after much debate.

While there were certainly some racial overtones to Sprick’s opposition, he and others seemed to be more concerned over the former Cassius Clay’s conversion to Islam plus his ensuing refusal to be drafted.  Senator Sprick declared that if President Nixon would draft him now he would go to serve in Vietnam.  (Sprick was in his late 60s at the time.)

Ali’s speech on the campus actually caused some controversy on its own.  One of the things he advocated for segregation. He praised Alabama Governor George Wallace.  The Arkansas Gazette which had been following the saga in both news stories and editorials, noted that remarks like that should have endeared Ali to Dan Sprick and others.

Ali, of course, resumed his boxing career and defined that sport in the 1970s with his talent in the ring and his showmanship.

Based on an editorial, Sprick sued the Gazette for libel. The paper settled with him out of court because his health was poor. Sprick died in 1972.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back, sports | Tagged Arkansas Gazette, Arkansas General Assembly, Cassius Clay, Dan T. Sprick, David Mullins, Muhammed Ali, Orval Faubus, University of Arkansas, Winthrop Rockefeller

100 years ago – Christmas Day 1919 in Little Rock

Posted on December 25, 2019 by Scott

Christmas Day in 1919 was on a Thursday.  In Washington DC, the federal government celebrated its first Christmas since 1916 following the cessation and wrap up of The Great War. (Though the Armistice had been signed in November 1918, they were still winding down operations by Christmas that year a few weeks later.)

John D. Rockefeller also made national headlines by announcing a $100 million dollar donation (roughly $1.5 billion today) with half of it going to increase salaries for college professors and the other half going to fight diseases.

Closer to home (this was about 35 years before a Rockefeller would live in Little Rock), philanthropy abounded as well.  The Arkansas Democrat had a program at the Kempner Theatre for needy children. In addition to performances by several local singers, they were invited on the stage to receive a gift beneath a large Christmas tree.  The Democrat and its readers donated the approximate $2,000 (equivalent of $30,000 in 2019) for the gifts. Elsewhere in Little Rock, the Salvation Army, Red Cross, and YWCA also presented toys, clothing, and food baskets to those in need.

Soldiers convalescing at the Camp Pike hospital were given an entertainment and gifts.  Likewise, at St. Vincent’s Infirmary, staff presented presents to patients and to each other.

The only government office open was the Police Court in Little Rock to address those arrested the night before.  One man, who had been caught with an oversized revolver, was set free but given a warning. The only person arrested for enjoying Christmas cheer a bit too much was a woman. The judge ordered her to be released, as soon as she was sober enough to go on her way.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, Holidays, LR Look Back | Tagged Arkansas Democrat, Ben D. Brickhouse, Christmas, City of Little Rock, John D. Rockefeller, Kempner Theatre, St. Vincent Medical Center

90 years ago today, the Museum of Discovery was given to the City of Little Rock as a Christmas present

Posted on December 19, 2019 by Scott

Bernie Babcock

At the City Council meeting on December 19, 1929, Bernie Babcock presented the City of Little Rock with a Christmas present — the Museum of Natural History.

After the meeting was convened, Mrs. Babcock was given permission to make remarks to the City.  According to Council minutes from that meeting, she stated “she was at this time making a Christmas gift to the City of Little Rock in presenting to it the museum located on the third floor of the City Hall, setting forth, at length, the struggles in making the collections of which the museum is composed, and stressing the value of the museum to the city.”

Upon a motion, the museum was accepted by the City.  She then presented letters which formally made the offer to the City and suggested persons for a governing board.

Mrs. Babcock had been trying to get the City to accept the museum for a while.  She had been unsuccessful in getting Mayor Pat L. Robinson to agree to it after he took office in April 1929.  Ever-determined, she circumvented the mayor and went directly to the City Council. By December 1929, they had grown estranged from Mayor Robinson.

Since December 19, 1929, the museum has been affiliated with the City of Little Rock.  During that time, it has had several names and three locations.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back, Museum, Science | Tagged Bernie Babcock, Little Rock City Council, Little Rock City Hall, Museum of Discovery, Pat L. Robinson

Little Rock’s 25th Mayor and a founder of UAMS, Dr. J. J. McAlmont was born on Dec 19, 1821

Posted on December 19, 2019 by Scott

Future Little Rock Mayor John Josephus McAlmont was born on this date in 1821 in New York state. (Various reports give his birth date as December 22 — but the family reports December 19 as the date.)

After studying medicine in Pennsylvania and Ohio, he arrived in Little Rock in March 1850 with his family.  He first practiced medicine in nearby Benton, before returning to Little Rock in 1852.  In addition to being a physician, he was a pharmacist.

During the Civil War, he relocated his family out of Little Rock (to a spot where the present day community of McAlmont bears his name).  Following the war, he moved them back to the City.  In January 1866 he was elected Mayor of Little Rock, the first elected Mayor since local government resumed following the Civil War.

In October 1879, he and seven other physicians founded the Arkansas Industrial University Medical Department in Little Rock. This institution has grown into the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.  He served on the faculty of the medical school for several years.

Dr. McAlmont died in September 1896.  He is buried at Mount Holly Cemetery.  In addition to the McAlmont community bearing his name, there is a McAlmont street in downtown Little Rock which was named in his memory.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back, Science | Tagged City of Little Rock, Civil War, John J. McAlmont, Mount Holly Cemetery, UAMS

101 years since the birth of trailblazer Charles Bussey

Posted on December 18, 2019 by Scott

101 years ago future Little Rock Mayor Charles Bussey was born in Stamps on December 18, 1918.  He would spend his adult life in Little Rock after college and World War II service.

Throughout his life he was a trailblazer. He was the first African American Sheriff’s Deputy in Pulaski County and expanded the Junior Deputy program into the African American community.

In 1968 he became the first African American elected to the Little Rock City Board of Directors. He was not the first African American to run for the City Board, but he was the first to win a race. Mr. Bussey sought support not just from the African American community, but from all sectors of Little Rock.

Apparently, while campaigning in 1968, he deliberately went into the Arkansas headquarters of segregationist presidential candidate George Wallace to see about leaving campaign literature. A hulking man with a broad smile, he shocked the young receptionist. He was undoubtedly the first (and probably last) African American to enter that campaign headquarters.

He served from 1969-1977 and again from 1979 through 1991. In 1981 he was selected by his fellow City Directors to serve as Little Rock’s Mayor, which made him the first African American Mayor of Little Rock. He served as Assistant Mayor of Little Rock for a total of 8.5 years which is the longest of anyone in the City’s history.

Throughout his lifetime Mayor Bussey championed youth outreach efforts. He also was active in the Arkansas Municipal League, National League of Cities, West Little Rock Rotary Club, Elks, Shriners and many other organizations.

In 2006 he was posthumously inducted into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame. The previous year, 20th Street in Little Rock was renamed in his honor. In 2015 he was included in the Arkansas Civil Rights Heritage Trail.

At the 2005 street naming ceremony, the following remarks about Mayor Bussey were made:

Little Rock Mayor Jim Dailey (who was mayor in 2005 and had served on the City Board of Directors with Bussey)  “Charlie’s heart was in this City, so it is fitting that this street bearing his name goes right through the heart of Little Rock. Especially in those early days on the Board, even before I served with him, African-Americans were really struggling to be involved.  He helped so many people to be involved in Little Rock and the entire state.”

Johnnie Pugh, who was City Director for Ward 1 at the time noted: “He certainly made Little Rock a better place for children and youths.  Those that he touched have grown up and continued to be engaged in making the City a better place for everyone.”

In a letter written by former Mayor Lottie Shackelford, Bussey was described as “a first class dresser who spent much of his working life in and around City Hall.  He was a man always on the move who worked to make Little Rock a first class city.”

The late Myra Jones, a former State Representative and LR City Director, served as Assistant Mayor when Bussey was Mayor.  She remembered Bussey “would tell me who to see, but never tell me what the purpose was.  That was for me to discover; and in so doing, it made me a better Director.”

Larry Staggers, a longtime employee in the City’s Parks & Recreation Department called Bussey, “an extraordinary man in an extraordinary time.”

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History, LR Look Back | Tagged Arkansas Black Hall of Fame, Arkansas Civil Rights Heritage Trail, Arkansas Municipal League, Charles Bussey, City of Little Rock, Jim Dailey, Johnnie Pugh, Larry Staggers, Lottie Shackelford, Myra Jones

Little Rock receives positive press in national magazines

Posted on December 17, 2019 by Scott

During the week of December 8, Little Rock was recognized in American Theatre and Forbes.

The American Theatre article detailed the theatre’s efforts to come back after it had shuttered in April 2018.  Here is a link to the story.  (EDITORIAL NOTE: The Rep may have come back, but as the story points out, it is not out of the woods. It still needs great and sustained community support, not only from ticket sales but also donations.)

Also, Forbes highlighted Little Rock as one of the top cities “Where the Jobs Will Be in 2020.” One of the criteria they use the leisure and hospitality sector. While Little Rock certainly has that (and the Rep’s resurgence as well as the reimagining of the Arkansas Arts Center are two examples of that), we do not need to rest on our laurels.

Little Rock is in heady company, and high up on the list.

Many of the other cities on the list are cities to which we look for inspiration. Others are ones deemed “Hot Cities.”  We certainly deserve to be on this list and should be proud of it.

Here is the top 5 (with some ties).  It is based on the Net employment outlook.

1 – Chattanooga TN (34%)
2 – Columbus OH (33%)
3 – Deltona FL; Cape Coral FL (31%)
4 – Baltimore MD (29%)
5 – Little Rock AR; Charleston SC (28%)

Rounding out the Top 10 (with many ties)
6 – Winston-Salem NC; San Antonio TX; Pittsburgh PA; Madison WI (27%)
7 – Ogden UT; McAllen TX; Jacksonville FL; Greenville SC (24%)
8 – Wichita KS; Portland OR; Phoenix AZ; Omaha NE; Dallas TX; Cleveland OH; Cincinnati OH (23%)
9 – San Francisco CA; New Haven CT; Grand Rapids MI; Denver CO; Dayton OH; Charlotte NC (22%)
10 – Virginia Beach VA; San Jose CA; Salt Lake City UT; Raleigh NC; Orlando FL; Miami FL; Lakeland FL; Knoxville TN; Greensboro NC; Columbia SC; Birmingham AL; Baton Rouge LA. (21%)

We need to celebrate these achievements. But, just as other cities are doing, we need to channel President Jed Bartlett and ask “What’s next?’ and roll up our sleeves.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, Theatre | Tagged American Theatre (magazine), Arkansas Arts Center, Arkansas Repertory Theatre, Forbes (magazine), Little Rock Regional Chamber, Will Trice

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