One hundred and seven years ago today, Winthrop Rockefeller was born in New York. After moving to Arkansas in the early 1950s, he would establish himself as a positive force for the development of the state.
Perhaps his most obvious cultural impact was helping to transform the provincial Little Rock Museum of Fine Arts into the first rate Arkansas Arts Center. He and his family were generous donors of money and art to this effort.
But that was not all. And his legacy continues. Through the effort of the Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation, many cultural institutions have received funds for programming which has reached into every county and every corner of this state. For instance, one of the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra’s string quartets is the Rockefeller Quartet.
It is hard to quantify what impact his efforts had on cultural institutions which did not even exist in his lifetime. Without the elevation of the arts and the understanding of their impact, it is doubtful that endeavors such as the Arkansas Repertory Theatre, Arkansas Opera Theatre (now Wildwood Park for the Arts) and Ballet Arkansas would have had success with donors in their nascent days.
Among the many functions of the Winthrop Rockefeller Institute atop Petit Jean Mountain is to provide a place for people to gather and exchange ideas. Often cultural topics are part of those discussions.
Through his son, Winthrop Paul Rockefeller, and his grandchildren, the Rockefeller legacy has continued since his death in 1973. Recently, Skip Rutherford hosted a conversation at the Clinton School with one of WR’s grandsons Will Rockefeller along side Adams Pryor (grandson of another Arkansas political titan, David Pryor). A video of that conversation can be viewed here.
The next generation of two longtime Arkansas political families will be the focus of a Clinton School program this evening (March 29).
In 1976, Anne Bartley was sworn in as the first director of what was then known as the Department of Arkansas Natural and Cultural Heritage. In that capacity, she was the first woman to serve in an Arkansas Governor’s cabinet. She had encouraged Governor David Pryor to propose establishing the department and then had lobbied the Arkansas General Assembly to create it. (Her oath of office was administered by the first woman on the Arkansas Supreme Court, Justice Elsijane Trimble Roy.)
Elsijane Trimble Roy was born the daughter of a judge. At an early age, she knew she wanted to be an attorney. She would eventually become not only the third female to graduate from the University of Arkansas Law School, but the first female circuit court judge in Arkansas, the first female on the Arkansas Supreme Court, and the first female Federal judge from Arkansas.
Today is the Daisy Bates Holiday in the State of Arkansas. So it is an appropriate day to pay tribute to Mrs. Bates, who played a leading role in the Little Rock Integration Crisis of 1957.
Though a native of Batesville (and a proud booster to this day), James L. “Skip” Rutherford has lived in Little Rock for many years. While he was a student at the University of Arkansas, he probably never envisioned the impact he would have on the cultural scene of Little Rock.
In August 1977, Oscar winner Gregory Peck appeared in Little Rock for the premiere of the film MacARTHUR. He played the general who had been born in Little Rock but who spent most of his life downplaying (or even denying) that fact.