LITTLE ROCK CITY HALL CELEBRATES CENTURY OF SERVICE

Seal of Little Rock
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :
Tuesday, Apr 15, 2008

Media Release

City of Little Rock Public Relations (501) 371-6801

Scott Carter 501-371-4421

(April 15, 2008 -- Little Rock, AR) Surrounded by over 200 well-wishers, Little Rock’s 71st and 72nd Mayors blew out candles on a birthday cake to celebrate the 100th Birthday of Little Rock City Hall. Current Mayor Mark Stodola and former Mayor Jim Dailey were joined by local and state elected officials, City Manager Bruce T. Moore and other City staff, and Little Rock citizens at the birthday party.

In 1908, the Italian Renaissance Revival style building, which had been designed by local architect Charles Thompson, opened on April 15 with an Open House. Staff had started moving into the building in March of that year.

“We wanted to take the time to commemorate this occasion and to celebrate 100 years of service to the citizens of Little Rock,” said City Manager Moore.

In 1903, W. E. Lenon became Mayor of Little Rock. Back then, the terms were two-year terms.  By the start of his second term in 1905, he realized that the City was outgrowing City Hall, which was, at the time, on the northeast corner of Markham and Louisiana – where part of the Statehouse Convention Center sits today.

In February 1906, Mayor Lenon appointed a committee of five aldermen to over see the planning for the building of a new City Hall. In July 1906, the City Council approved plans, which called for a City Hall with an municipal auditorium wing. There was some hue and cry about wasteful spending, so, in September 1906, those plans were scrapped and a simpler City Hall was approved for the cost of $175,000.

The last resolution in the old City Hall called for the banning of smoking in the new Council Chambers – while the Council was in session. This may well have been the first smoking ban in a public government building in the history of Arkansas.

When the building opened, the third floor was not finished out. The space was not needed. When the Museum of Natural History and Antiquities (now the Museum of Discovery) moved into City Hall in 1929, they had to finish out their space.

In 1912, the new Central Fire Station, designed in the Beaux Arts style, was constructed adjacent to City Hall. During the 1930s, as the City grew, more space was needed. A garage, designed in the “austere, utilitarian” style was built in 1936 and a City Jail Annex, built by the WPA in the modified Art Deco style was built in 1938. 

By 1955, the Dome which sat on top of City Hall needed severe repairs. The wooden supports and the copper cladding were both in dire shape. Mayor Pratt Remmel set aside money for the dome to be repaired. After defeating Remmel in his bid for a third term, Mayor Woodrow Mann scrapped plans for the repair and, indeed, scrapped the dome.

Following the lead of County Judge Arch Campbell who had removed the tower at the County Courthouse, Mann proposed removal of the dome. He had an informal survey which had three options: repair the dome, replace the dome with an aluminum one, or remove it. This was open to anyone to respond – voting eligibility or Little Rock residency did not matter. By a slim margin, remove the dome won – so the dome was removed.

In 1960, as air conditioning was installed, windows were bricked in to promote energy efficiency. At the time, the feeling was that a new City Hall would be constructed in the 1970s somewhere more central to the growing city. Relocation talk persisted throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. By that time, City Hall had been modified a great deal – with no thought about historic preservation. When the Police and Fire Department had moved out into their new facilities, their old spaces had become storage.

By 1984, the decision was made to stay at Markham and Broadway. An extensive renovation and restoration effort was undertaken. In 1988, the building reopened, and the interior had been restored to its 1908 appearance.

Since 1908, there have been 200 men and women who have served on the City Council or City Board in this building. 33 of them have been Mayor.

According to Moore, “There will be more festivities and events planned throughout the remainder of 2008.”

-30-