2018 marks 150 years since the opening of the 1868 Little Rock City Hall, which was located at 120 to 122 West Markham. This two story building was the home to Little Rock civic life from 1868 until 1908, when the current building was opened.
After City offices moved out, the building housed private businesses until it was torn down in 1964 for urban renewal. In the early 1980s, the land once again returned to public use when a portion of the Statehouse Convention Center was built on the site.
To mark the 150th anniversary of the opening of the 1868 City Hall, two plaques will be dedicated today. The first pays tribute to the leaders who oversaw the construction and opening of the building and those who were present when the building closed as City Hall.
The other plaque honors the African American leaders who were on the Little Rock City Council between 1868 and 1893. It also pays tribute to Mifflin Wistar Gibbs who was elected Little Rock Police Judge in 1874. He became the first African American to be elected to a municipal judgeship in the United States.
While Little Rock city government met in a variety of spaces between 1832 and 1868, records are incomplete as to the locations of those buildings. The 1868 City Hall location is the first City Hall for which a location and appearance are known.
August Wilson received his second Pulitzer for The Piano Lesson in 1990. It was thirteen years later, that play would take the stage of Arkansas Rep in January 2003 And while he was not the lead, local favorite Lawrence Hamilton shone in the play.
On April 29, 1926, nine hot air balloons took off from Little Rock’s airport (which was actually just an airfield at the time) in a national race to win the Litchfield Trophy. In addition to the trophy, the winner would be on the American team in an international balloon race in Belgium.
On April 28, 1883, future Little Rock Mayor Sam M. Wassell was born. His grandfather John W. Wassell had been appointed Mayor of Little Rock in 1868. He is the only Little Rock Mayor to be a grandson of another Little Rock Mayor.
On April 28, 1784, in Virginia, future Little Rock Alderman (and acting Mayor) Major Nicholas Peay was born the eleventh of at least thirteen children. (His gravestone lists a May date for his birth, but all other records indicate April 28, 1784.) A veteran of the War of 1812 and the Indian Wars, he later moved to Kentucky (where he met and married his wife, Juliet Neill, in 1814) before settling in Arkansas on September 18, 1825. At the time, they were the ninth family to set up residence in Little Rock.
In December 1947, Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire opened on Broadway. Two years later, in December 1949, the national tour of the play came to Robinson Auditorium.
Ballet Arkansas presents DanceWorks today from 10am to 4pm at the studio on Main Street.