If Jurassic World has put you in the mood for more dinosaurs, the Clinton Presidential Center has just what you need. Through October 18, it is featuring Dinosaurs Around the World through October 18.
Tag Archives: Bill Clinton
Little Rock Look Back: Mayor Buddy Benafield
Future Little Rock Mayor James Weldon “Buddy” Benafield was born on July 5, 1927 in Coy, Arkansas. As a child he spent part of his time chopping cotton. He graduated from England High School and then served in the U.S. Navy. Following his stint in the military, he enrolled in Arkansas State Teachers College (now the University of Central Arkansas).
After college he returned to England. From 1967 to 1974 he served as Mayor of England. While in England, he also worked to establish a hospital there. While he was Mayor, Benafield also served as a legislative aide to Governor Dale Bumpers.
After moving to Little Rock, Benafield served as legislative aide to Governor Frank White. He had been a donor to former Governor Bill Clinton, who had been defeated by White. Though a staunch Democrat, he remarked to the media at the time that he had been a friend of White’s and never declined a Governor’s request for help.
Long active in Democratic politics, he had served as Secretary of the State Democratic Party. (One of his daughters, Dawne Benafield Vandiver has carried on the family tradition serving in several leadership positions in the State Democratic Party. Most recently she was Executive Director of the party.)
In January 1982, Benafield was appointed to fill a vacancy on the Little Rock City Board of Directors. He ran for election to a full term in November 1982 and was reelected in November 1986. From January 1983 to December 1984, Benafield served as Mayor of Little Rock.
After leaving the Little Rock City Board in January 1991, he has remained engaged in civic matters. He served a term on the Arkansas Highway and Transportation Commission. He was first appointed in January 1993 by Gov. Jim Guy Tucker to fill out the remainder of Rodney Slater’s term. Slater had resigned to to take a job in the Clinton Administration in Washington DC. In 1995, he was reappointed, this time to a full ten year term. This was only the second time a member of the Highway Commission had been reappointed.
Buddy Benafield is the only Little Rock Mayor to have also been a mayor of another Arkansas city. He continues to be involved in farming and a variety of business ventures and has maintained his interest in politics.
Free Admission to Clinton Center for Independence Day
Friday, July 3 and Saturday, July 4, the Clinton Presidential Center will feature free admission to the exhibits.
Explore the Clinton Center’s newest exhibit, “Dinosaurs Around the World,” as well as our permanent exhibits. Acoustiguide audio tours narrated by President Clinton are also free. The Clinton Center is open from 9am to 5pm on Friday and Saturday.
Dinosaurs Around the World takes you back in time on a dinosaur adventure and a tour of an Earth very different from today – a time before the continents as we know them existed, when lush landscapes covered Africa and greenery was the norm in Antarctica! With 13 life-sized animatronics, a multi-layered narrative, fossils, authentic casts, cutting-edge research and immersive design elements, you’ll experience the Age of Reptiles as it comes to life!
The permanent exhibits include:
Legacies & Lunch Commemorates Roosevelt Thompson
Roosevelt Thompson was a gifted young man who had a bright future in public service before his death in an automobile accident in 1984. In honor of the 35th anniversary of Thompson’s graduation from Little Rock Central High School, the Butler Center, a department of the Central Arkansas Library System (CALS), will present a special Legacies & Lunch program, co-hosted by the Clinton School of Public Service, on Wednesday, June 3, from noon-1 p.m. at the CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
At Central High School, Thompson was student body president, an All-Star football player, and a National Merit Scholar. Thompson went on to attend Yale University, which has established a prestigious prize in his honor. While at Yale, he was selected as a Rhodes Scholar.
At this special Legacies & Lunch program, co-hosted by the Clinton School of Public Service, historic video footage featuring Thompson, Bill and Hillary Clinton, and others, will be shown. A panel, including Elaine Dumas, one of his teachers and mentors; Lee Thompson, his brother; and Beth Felton, his classmate at Central and a staff member at the CALS Roosevelt Thompson Branch Library, will discuss how his memory lives on today. Following this discussion, attendees may share memories and ask questions. After the program, all are invited to send their thoughts to RememberingRosey@cals.org.
Legacies & Lunch is free, open to the public, and sponsored in part by the Arkansas Humanities Council. Attendees are invited to bring a sack lunch; drinks and dessert are provided. For more information, call 501-918-3033.
Little Rock Look Back: Mayor Lottie Shackelford
On April 30, 1941, future Little Rock Mayor Lottie Shackelford was born. Throughout her career in public service she has been a trailblazer.
Active in community activities and politics, she ran for the City Board in 1974 and lost. But she was appointed to the Little Rock City Board in September 1978 to fill a vacancy. This made her the first African American woman to serve on he City Board, and indeed on any governing board for the City (during Reconstruction, there were at least three African Americans on the City Council, but they were all men.) She was subsequently elected to a full-term on the City Board in 1980 winning 55% of the vote over three male candidates.
She was subsequently re-elected in 1984 (unopposed) and in 1988 (with 60% of the vote).
In January 1987, Shackelford became the first female mayor of Little Rock when she was chosen by her colleagues on the City Board to serve in that position. She was Mayor until December 1988.
From 1982 until 1992, she served as Executive Director of the Arkansas Regional Minority Purchasing Council. She left that position to serve as Deputy Campaign Manager of Clinton for President. She subsequently served on the Clinton/Gore transition team. She later served on the Overseas Private Investment Corporation from 1993 to 2003. She was the first African American to be in that position.
A graduate of Philander Smith College, she has also studied at the Arkansas Institute of Politics at Hendrix College and the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
Mayor Shackelford has also served on numerous boards including the Little Rock Airport Commission, Philander Smith College, Chapman Funds (Maryland) and Medicis Pharmaceutical Corporation (Arizona). She has been the longest serving Vice-Chair of the Democratic National Committee.
Mayor Shackelford was in the first class of inductees for the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame.
Dinosaurs Abound at Clinton Center now through October
The Clinton Presidential Center presents Dinosaurs Around the World through October 18.
Little Rock Look Back: Thomas Jefferson
On April 13, 1743, Thomas Jefferson was born in Virginia. Along with Benjamin Franklin, he was one of the first American multi-hyphenate Renaissance men. Author, musician, inventor, diplomat, epicurean, architect, educator, and President. Certainly his writing of the Declaration of Independence was of paramount importance to the US, even if he had never served as President.
It was during his Presidency that Thomas Jefferson actively pursued the Louisiana Purchase which brought what is now Arkansas into the United States. While he never visited the area, he did send explorers to chart out the Louisiana Purchase. The subusequent surveying which took place during the Madison presidency was based on standards developed by Jefferson for the surveying of Ohio.
In Little Rock, Jefferson is remembered with Jefferson Elementary and Jefferson Street. He is also the eponym for Bill Clinton’s middle name.