When Stella Boyle Smith died at the age of 100 in 1994, she was well known for her love of music and philanthropy. It is a lasting connection of her to a building in which she spent so many hours as an arts patron.
Smith was a Little Rock philanthropist and founder of the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra. She lived to be 100, but ensured that her legacy would continue. In her lifetime, she donated more than $2.5 million to organizations in the music and medical fields. Since her death, the Stella Boyle Smith Trust has donated more than $5 million. One of its most recent gifts was the sculpture In the Wings which graces the front of Robinson Center.
She was born in Farmington, Mo., into a large, musically inclined family, which moved to Arkansas when she was two. She began singing at the age of three and graduated from high school at 14. In 1922, she moved to Little Rock with her first husband, Dandridge Perry Compton, who died in 1935. Her second husband, George Smith, held various business interests and extensive farms in Woodruff and Arkansas counties, which allowed them to engage in philanthropy. Mr. Smith died in 1946.
In 1923, Smith’s love for music inspired her to start The Musical Group in her living room of her residence at 102 Ridgeway Drive in Little Rock, where she lived until she died. Through several iterations, the group eventually became the Arkansas Symphony Orchestra in 1966. Her initial objective was to establish the symphony as an educational tool for children, and, in 1968, she helped establish the Youth Orchestra. In 1972, the symphony board of directors named her an honorary life member. Smith established a trust fund for the symphony’s permanent endowment in 1985. A loyal friend of music and the symphony, she attended nearly every performance and most rehearsals.
Smith was also a pianist. In 1988, she gave UALR a grand piano as well as an endowed trust of $500,000. When she purchased the grand piano for UALR, a Steinway, she later on the same day purchased a Steinway for herself. She remains the only individual to purchase two Steinway grand pianos in the same day. UALR renamed its concert hall the Stella Boyle Smith Concert Hall as a tribute to her. That year the university also gave her an honorary doctor of humane letters degree. Interest from the trust provides scholarships each year for music students studying string instruments, piano or voice. After she died, her personal Steinway was given to UALR. The music faculty and students now lovingly refer to the two pianos as Stella and George (after her and her husband).
Smith enabled many students around the state to attend college through the more than 200 scholarships that she financed.
Other organizations that have benefited from her generosity include Arkansas Arts Center and Historic Arkansas Museum as well as the University of Arkansas.
On February 17, 1980, a cold and clear Sunday morning, over seven decades of Arkansas history came tumbling down as the Hotel Marion and Grady Manning Hotel were imploded. Thousands of people watched from places in downtown Little Rock and along the Arkansas River. Many more were able to watch from live coverage carried on KATV, KARK and KTHV. Those that missed it were able to see the replays multiple times on the news.
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Tonight a new Miss America will be crowned. Arkansas’ own Savvy Shields will conclude her whirlwind year as the third Miss America to come from the Natural State.
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