The photographer's focus looking east down Fifth Street, today's Capitol Avenue, was the Frederica Hotel at Fifth and Gaines streets. Fred Allsopp had built the hotel in 1910 on the street car line connecting downtown with the state Capitol.
"It was a weight lifted off," Nathan Hughes of Bentonville said. "It was the feeling that justice was served."
The last time Rwake put out a new record, Barack Obama was in his first term as president of the United States. So much has changed since then. Now, 13 and a half years later, the Little Rock sludge metal band is back with their sixth album, “The Return of Magik,” which drops on Friday, March 14 via Relapse Records. Pre-order the album here.
Officials with the Little Rock Police Department confirmed that this week's lethal shooting at Park Plaza Mall is being investigated as an attempted robbery.LRP
After years of litigation, East Haven and the Farm River Rock quarry head toward a settlement of up to $13.5 million.
One of four men charged in the fatal shooting at a 2024 block party in Arkansas that killed one person and injured several others has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder.
A wall in the Rock It! Lab space in downtown Little Rock's River Market District reads, “If you want to travel fast, travel alone. If you
The city board will vote next week on whether to renew the city’s contract with SoundThinking Inc., formerly named ShotSpotter, and known for its controversial gunshot detection technology used by the LRPD.
An amendment recently filed ahead of the Arkansas legislative session seeks to fully abolish slavery in the Natural State.
The Arkansas Department of Transportation will hold three public involvement meetings to discuss preliminary findings from the Western North-South Connector Study.
Four years ago, members of Arkansas' congressional delegation decried the riot at the U.S. Capitol, during which supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the legislative building in hopes of overturning the 2020 presidential election results.
"It was a weight lifted off," Nathan Hughes of Bentonville said. "It was the feeling that justice was served."