
Wassell
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.
Sam Wassell served on the Little Rock City Council from 1928 through 1934 and again from 1940 through 1946. He is one of the few 20th Century Little Rock Mayors who previously served on the City Council.
Wassell was an attorney; he practiced law privately and also served as an Assistant US Attorney. In 1930, he ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination for the US Congress representing the 5th Congressional District, which at the time included Little Rock.
Wassell ran for Mayor in 1947 and was unopposed in the general election. (Though the Democratic primary was heated as he took on the incumbent Dan Sprick.) He was unopposed in his bid for re-election in 1949. During his second term, President Harry S. Truman visited Little Rock. In 1951, he sought a third term as Mayor. No Little Rock Mayor had been successful in achieving a third consecutive term since 1923. Though he received the Democratic nomination, the Republican party nominated Pratt Remmel who defeated Wassell by a 2 to 1 margin.
With a new USS Little Rock recently put into naval service, it is interesting to note that Wassell’s wife, Ruth Wassell christened the previous USS Little Rock in 1944.
Mayor Wassell died on December 23, 1954 and is buried at Roselawn Cemetery in Little Rock.
On April 9, 1722, French explorer Jean-Baptiste Bénard de La Harpe rounded the bend of the Arkansas River and saw La Petite Roche and Le Rocher Français. He had entered the mouth of the Arkansas River on February 27 after traveling up the Mississippi River from New Orleans.
Very few sports can have a definitive “this was the first game in Little Rock” moment. But basketball does.
To Little Rock citizens under a certain age, the name Knoop means Knoop Park — a picturesque park tucked away in a pocket of Hillcrest. There are, however, still many who remember Werner C. Knoop as a business and political leader who helped shape Little Rock as a modern city.
It is interesting that the same man who brought an end to strife in Little Rock’s divided government in the post-Civil War era would then be active in a major rift in the Arkansas state government only a couple of years later. But that is just what Robert F. Catterson did.
On March 16, 1822, Captain Morris piloted the steamboat The Eagle to Little Rock, seventeen days after departing New Orleans. This became the first steamboat to reach Little Rock. The boat reached Little Rock at an early hour in the morning and Captain Morris, in order to arouse the town, fired a salute of several guns.
Vada Webb Sheid was the first woman to be elected to both the Arkansas House and the Arkansas Senate. She was also the first woman in the Arkansas Senate who did not first succeed a husband.