'55ers and '56ers were on their way somewhere. Problem is, no one can remember where!!! LOL
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“My mother talked often of Uncle Charlie” recalls well known local teacher and attorney, and graduate of Pulaski Heights, Ann Bilheimer Grimes.
Read MoreThe following tells a little about two Heights households involved in the closure of schools 61 years ago. The red brick home is the former Tucker residence and the one-story home is the former Ashmore residence. Mr. Ashmore is pictured reading the newspaper he helped write; and Mr. Tucker is seen leading a school board meeting in the heart of the crisis.
Read MorePulaski County's Sheriff Tom Gulley, back when we were in the 4th -- 5th grade (there-about), inaugurated a program aimed at promoting lawful consciousness among youths.
Read MoreL. Dickson Flake, the commercial real estate developer whose major projects include the 33-story Regions Center in Little Rock and J.B. Hunt Transport Services headquarters in Lowell, died Tuesday in Little Rock. He was 81.
Read MoreBOBBY ROSS BLOUNT a Little Rock Central High Starduster! My dad wrote his own obituary years ago (except for the end date, of course). He did a great job, but it doesn't really do justice to the remarkable and interesting life he lived. Cyndee Blount Snodgrass
Read MoreSpeaking of historic restaurants, Franke's Cafeteria, in the Market Place Shopping Center, 11121 N. Rodney Parham Road, Little Rock, closed March 23 with a post on its Facebook page that it was shutting temporarily due to the covid-19 outbreak.
Read MoreAnyone remember eating here? Was this once the "Lido" where they had a lady playing the organ? I think I'm confused! [No shock there!!!]
Read MoreHerb Wright just finished his first round of chemo. 4 more to go for now. He and Duke look pretty comfortable to me!!!
Read MoreRead MoreFor those of you who haven't been back to Little Rock in several years, here's a view that will be completely unrecognizable to you.
The year was 1941 and there was concern in the air at Smith’s Drug Store, where Heights residents gathered at the time to chat over fountain cokes and BLT’s. War was raging in Europe. Pearl Harbor would be bombed later that year. Little Rock would soon be a city of predominately women and children, with most able-bodied men called to duty. 3519 Arkansans would die in the war effort during the next four years.
Read MoreBuilt in the period 1884 – 1892 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1976, Trinity Episcopal Cathedral is a featured landmark of the Little Rock's Quapaw Quarter.
Read MoreSALUTE TO MITCHELL ELEMENTARY "BACK IN THE DAY"
Read MoreWe called ourselves the CEO Dinner Group = Classmates Eat Out. Gosh, I'm missing those Mondays! Hopefully, they'll be back soon. Here's hoping all of you are being particularly careful. No need to take chances, especially at our age.
Read More"My dad was a WWll Veteran. He is buried at Ft. San Houston. He fought for and received the first GI Loan in America after it was voted into law. He bought our home in Little Rock, Arkansas." Sherry Quinn
Read MoreThis photo is looking south from the north end of the Broadway Bridge in the mid 1950s. The LR city hall is on the right in the distance. Where was Fisher's? Wouldn't you like to have a quarter for every time you drove across this Bridge? Looks quite different today.
Read MoreThe story starts in Naples, Italy, in the early 1900s when Giovanni Bruno arrived by boat to Ellis Island and opened one of the first pizzerias in New York City. Fast-forward to 1947, Bruno’s son Vincent “Jimmy” Bruno opens Little Italy Café in Levy, Arkansas.
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