While this headline may say “Little Rock Look Back,” Lottie Shackelford is still very much focused on the present and the future!
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. In 2015, she was inducted into the Arkansas Civil Rights Heritage Trail.
On April 18, 1880, future Little Rock Mayor Charles E. Moyer was born in Glenwood, Minnesota. A man of contradictions, he was both a candidate backed by (and probably personally involved in) the Ku Klux Klan, yet he also brought the Goodwill Industries organization to Little Rock and Arkansas to help those less fortunate.

On April 12, 1904, Mayor W. E. Lenon made what was the first official proposal for a municipal auditorium in Little Rock. Little did he know at the time that it would take from April 1904 until February 1940 to make this dream a reality.
One of the most important committees at the Arkansas General Assembly is the Joint Budget Committee. It is chaired by a senator and a representative. In 2011 and 2012, as a state representative, Kathy Webb became the first woman to chair the committee. Considering that the first woman to be sworn in to the Arkansas General Assembly (Erle Chambers) was from Little Rock, and the first woman to chair a standing committee of the General Assembly (Myra Jones) was from Little Rock, it is fitting that the first woman to chair Joint Budget was also from Little Rock.
On this date in 1900, future Little Rock Mayor Pat L. Robinson was born. While it cannot be verified that he was indeed named after St. Patrick, it would be fairly reasonable to assume there might be a connection.