On January 2, 1771 in Ireland, future Little Rock Mayor David Fulton was born.
He served as the fourth and final mayor of the Town of Little Rock in 1835. His term was cut short by the transition of Little Rock from town to city status. Once that happened in November 1835, a new election had to be held.
Mayor Fulton was also proprieter of the Tan Yard, a tanning operation in Little Rock. He later served as a judge and was appointed as Surveyor General of Public Lands in Arkansas by President Martin Van Buren in 1838.
Mayor Fulton married Elizabeth Savin in June 1795 in Maryland. She died in November 1829, while they resided in Alabama. One of their children was William Savin Fulton who served as Territorial Governor of Arkansas in 1835 and 1836 and was one of Arkansas’ first US Senators upon statehood in 1836. Mayor Fulton was serving as Mayor at the same time his son was Governor.
Mayor Fulton came to Little Rock in 1833. His daughter Jane Juliet Shall and her four children came to Little Rock as well. The family made the move to be nearer to the future governor. The Fultons and Shalls rented the Hinderliter House (now part of Historic Arkansas Museum) in 1834. One of his descendants, Louise Loughborough was the person who saved the Hinderliter House from destruction and was founder of what is now Historic Arkansas Museum.
In addition to serving as Mayor, he was president of the Anti-Gambling Society and a Pulaski County Justice of the Peace. From 1836 until 1838, he was County Judge of Pulaski County.
Mayor Fulton died on August 7, 1843 and is buried at Mount Holly Cemetery as are several other members of his family.
On April 19, 2018, THE LION KING opened a twenty-three (23) performance run at Robinson Center Performance Hall in the show’s first-ever production in Little Rock. Celebrity Attractions brought the show to the Rock.
3. In February , the Clinton Presidential Center presented the second annual Fusion: Arts + Humanities Arkansas, a program that promotes heritage and culture and celebrates human achievement by weaving the arts and humanities together to provide a unique and engaging experience. The theme of Fusion 2018 was Exploring the Louisiana Purchase and its Impact on Arkansas.
As the chronological countdown of 18 cultural events from 2018 starts —
Since the early 1990s, CALS has undergone several changes and expansions, now consisting of fourteen library locations in Little Rock, Perryville, and throughout Pulaski County. The Main Library moved from its original location at 7th and Louisiana to its current home in the River Market District, which helped trigger the revitalization of downtown Little Rock. That Main Library is now the centerpiece of a campus that includes the Ron Robinson Theater, the Cox Creative Center, and the Bobby L. Roberts Library of Arkansas History and Art (formerly ASI).
Families with young children who cannot stay up late to ring in the New Year can ring in the “Noon Year” at the Museum of Discovery’s “Noon Year’s Eve” event from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Monday, December 31.
After months of planning, on Saturday, December 29, 1821, the first edition of ARKANSAS GAZETTE to be published in Little Rock came off the press. Due to a shortage of paper supplies, it was only a two page edition, instead of the four pages which publisher William Woodruff had been customarily printing.
Before she was a Supreme Court Justice (and an action figure), Ruth Bader Ginsburg made history as a crusading young attorney. This chapter of her life is the subject of the new movie ON THE BASIS OF SEX.