Earlier this month, W. R. Smokie Norful picked up his latest Grammy Award. Born in Little Rock, the son of an AME minister, he now pastors his own congregation in addition to his recording career.
He grew up in Pine Bluff, and was deeply involved in his fathers church. He was interested in music from a very young age, reportedly picking out one-finger piano melodies at age two. His parents supported him with music lessons, and unusual for his background, allowed him to experiment with and listen to the current R&B and soul music of the day as well as gospel music. Norful attended Pine Bluff High School, where he occasionally performed in school assemblies and programs. He graduated from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff as a History major.
After graduation, taught history for several years at Jack Robey Junior High School, Pine Bluff High School and Evanston Township High School. For two years he also was the educational director for the Pine Bluff Housing Authority’s after-school program. He has also been a historian for the National Park Service and a congressional aid for the fourth congressional district.
He was ordained an elder in the African Methodist Episcopal church and has been a licensed preacher since 1997. Rev. Norful served as youth pastor, minister of music, and associate minister of St. John AME church in Pine Bluff, under the leadership of Rev. W.R. Norful Sr., and Teresa Norful until relocating to Chicago. He has also leads workshops for the National Baptist Convention USA, Inc.
Currently he serves as pastor of the Victory Cathedral Worship Center in Bolingbrook, which he founded in 2005. He has since established a second campus also in the Chicago area. In 2009, he was inducted into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame.
For more on Smokie Norful and other inductees into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame, visit the permanent exhibit at the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center. That museum is an agency of the Department of Arkansas Heritage.


