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The Pike–Fletcher–Terry House, also known as just the Terry Mansion and now the Community Gallery at the Terry House, is a historic house at 8th and Rock Streets in central Little Rock, Arkansas. It is a large two-story Greek Revival building, whose grounds occupy the western end of a city block bounded by Rock, 8th, and 7th Streets.
Brush Creek Township in Washington County, Arkansas Coordinates: 36°11′30″N 93°57′46″W / 36.19167°N 93.96278°W / 36.19167; -93 Country
The William J. Clinton Presidential Library and Museum is the presidential library of Bill Clinton, who served as the 42nd president of the United States from 1993 to 2001. It is located in Little Rock, Arkansas and includes the Clinton Presidential Library, the offices of the Clinton Foundation, and the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service.
The Clinton School of Public Service is a branch of the University of Arkansas system and is the newest of the presidential schools. It is located on the grounds of the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock. The school is housed in the Choctaw Route Station, a former Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad station built in 1899.
The completion of Interstate 30 between Little Rock and Dallas in the 1970s shifted the center of commerce toward the interstate. By the 1980s, most small shops downtown had shuttered. The decline ...
Previously had served as Mayor of England, Arkansas, in the 1970s. 67 61 Thomas A. Prince January 1985 – December 1986 68 62 Lottie Shackelford: January 1987 – December 1988 First female mayor of Little Rock. [1] Is also the second African American mayor of Little Rock. [1] 69 63 Floyd G. "Buddy" Villines January 1989 – December 1990 70 64
The site was the former location of the Arkansas School for the Blind, which had moved to new quarters near the city's Pulaski Heights neighborhood. The architects were Frank J. Ginocchio, Jr. and Edwin B. Cromwell. Little Rock insurance and television executive Clyde E. Lowry led the effort to raise funds to build the mansion. [3]
Brad Hendricks attended Arizona State University and obtained his Bachelor of Science degree in 1977, graduating cum laude. [5] While in college, Brad was a member of the Delta Theta Chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha (ΠΣΑ or PSA), the National Political Science Honor Society.