1812 – William Lewis, a fur trapper, builds a temporary seasonal home near the little rock.[1]
1814 - Colonel Edmund Hogan, builds 1st home and ferry at the little rock where the road from Missouri crossed the Arkansas River [2][3][4][5]
1815 - Colonel Edmund Hogan is signer of Grand Jury of the county of Arkansas, Territory of Missouri, requesting a company of regular troops be stationed in said county, April, 1816 [6]
1816–1818 Colonel Edmund Hogan represented Arkansas County in the 3rd Territorial General Assembly of Missouri in 1816 and 1818
1818 - Colonel Edmund Hogan appointed first justice of Peace of Pulaski county [7]
Jan 1820 Colonel Edmund Hogan sold his ferry and settlement on the Arkansas River at Little Rock to William Russell (The ferry was later owned by first territorial secretary Robert Crittenden) [4][9]
1825 – Little Rock Tavern in business (approximate date).[12]
1826- Robert Cunningham, son of Matthew and Eliza, is the first free child born in Little Rock. Records do not survive for births of enslaved persons leaving unclear whether Cunningham was the first child born in the city.
1911 – The current State Capitol building is completed. It is the second building constructed to house the state government, after the Old State House.
1915
Little Rock Motor Club active (approximate date).[31]
Little Rock race riot, May 4, murder suspect John Carter was lynched and his body burned; a white mob of 5,000 rioted in the black business section, destroying many buildings[35]
1957 – The Little Rock Nine are enrolled at Little Rock Central High School after public protests, and the Arkansas National Guard under the direction of Governor Orval Faubus, prevents their first attempt at enrollment. Arkansas was the third most segregated state in the country at the time (behind Mississippi and Alabama respectively) [citation needed]. President Dwight Eisenhower dispatches federal troops to ensure the students' safety and enforce their right to attend school. These events are collectively referred to as the Crisis at Central High.[45][46]
1958 – All three public high schools in Little Rock are closed for one year by Governor Faubus in an attempt to subvert federal efforts to desegregate Arkansas public schools.
1968 – Construction booms downtown, Worthen Bank Building at 375 feet (114 m) and Union National Bank at 330 feet (100 m) are under construction and replace The Tower Building as the city's tallest buildings. Union National Bank subsequently merged into Worthen, which eventually would become part of Bank of America. [when?]
1974 – First National Bank building is under construction and becomes the city's tallest building at 454 feet (138 m) and 30 stories. The building currently is Arkansas headquarters for Regions Bank.
1975 – Central Arkansas Library System headquartered in city.[47]
1981 – City creates the Little Rock Ambulance Authority (Emergency Medical Health Care Facilities Board) as an oversite committee for emergency medical care in the city.[48]
The Capitol Tower is completed, and at 40 stories and 547 feet (167 m) tall, is the tallest building in Arkansas. The skyscraper's name changed to the TCBY Tower later, and became the Metropolitan Tower as of October 2004. The Stephens Building is also completed, and is 25 stories and 365 feet (111 m) tall when finished. It was named the First South building, and then the Rogers building. [when?]
November 3: Bill Clinton is elected President of the United States. He delivers an election night acceptance speech from the front steps of the historic Old State House in downtown Little Rock. He is the first person from the State of Arkansas to be elected president. He was elected to a second term in 1996.
Sister city agreement established with Hanam, South Korea.[49]
1994 – Sister city agreement established with Changchun, People's Republic of China.[49]
March 1: An F4 tornado strikes the city's southern and eastern suburbs, killing five (among 15 total deaths throughout the tornado's 27-mile path across Central Arkansas).
1999
January 21: An F3 tornado (one of three tornadoes to hit Pulaski County during the broader outbreak) causes severe damage to over 235 buildings in neighborhoods south of downtown, and knocks down several trees on the property of the Arkansas Governor's Mansion; three people died as a result of the storm.
First Little Rock Marathon is held. Counting the relays, 1,615 runners participate in the 42.195-kilometre (26.219 mi) race, making it one of the top 25 races in the nation for 2003.
The international charitable organization Heifer International dedicates a $17.5 million world headquarters in downtown Little Rock. The organization announces plans to further develop the 33-acre (130,000 m2) location into the Heifer International Center campus.
The Pulaski County Pedestrian and Bicycle Bridge, nicknamed the Big Dam Bridge, opens to the public. It extends 3,463 feet (1,056 m) across the Arkansas River, and is the world’s longest bridge specifically built for pedestrians/bicycles.[53]
A five-year construction boom of mixed-use, high-rise buildings in downtown's historic River Market district began with over 60 stories of residential and retail property and 240 additional hotel rooms developed. Many residential projects were completed during this period such as the Capital Commerce Center (2002), First Security Center (2004), 300 Third Tower (2006), and River Market Tower (2009).
^United Daughters of the Confederacy. Arkansas Division. Memorial Chapter, Little Rock (1919), Historical Arkansas, Little Rock, OL23361792M{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^"Eddies from the weekly current of motor happenings: pungent paragraphs picked up from various sources". Motor Age. Chicago. October 28, 1915. OCLC1776327.
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D. Allen Stokes (1964). "The First Theatrical Season in Arkansas: Little Rock, 1838–1839". Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 23.
Ira Don Richards. Story of a Rivertown: Little Rock in the Nineteenth Century. Benton, AR: 1969.
Little Rock Handbook. Little Rock: James W. Bell, 1980.
Ory Mazar Nergal, ed. (1980), "Little Rock, AR", Encyclopedia of American Cities, New York: E.P. Dutton, OL4120668M
Paul D. Lack (1982). "An Urban Slave Community: Little Rock, 1831–1862". Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 41.
E.F. Chesnutt (1983). "Little Rock Gets Electric Lights". Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 42 (3): 239–253. doi:10.2307/40030760. JSTOR40030760.
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