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Railroad Approves Plan to Move and Preserve Rock Island Depot

The Rock Island depot at Perry, Arkansas on March 13, 2018. Photo: Michael Hibblen.

Almost a year to the day that I spoke at a meeting of the Perry County Historical & Genealogical Society and learned about the group’s effort to move and preserve the Rock Island depot at Perry, Arkansas, we got news from the current owner of the building that our proposal has been approved. It has taken many conversations and a lot of money to pay for liability coverage, but it finally looks like the 100-year-old depot will be saved!

We don’t have a date yet to move the depot to an adjacent lot being offered by the city, but I’ll be sure to post that here. Now we’re starting a renewed fundraising effort to cover the next steps in the process. We’re also starting to think about how best to restore the depot to its former glory. READ MORE.

PREVIOUS ENTRIES ON THE PERRY DEPOT:

Effort to Save Former Rock Island Depot in Perry, Arkansas from Demolition (Sept. 2, 2017) – Features extensive photos I took inside the depot and details the early proposal to move it. This was before the city offered a property and at that time the idea was being floated to move the depot across the tracks to an area also owned by the Little Rock & Western Railway. READ MORE

Challenges Persist in Moving the Former Rock Island Depot at Perry, Arkansas (March 27, 2018) – Includes the first estimate from a company on the cost of moving the depot, which was unrealistic. I also update details of a rejected request for the Little Rock & Western to donate a piece of land. READ MORE

UPDATES ON THE PERRY DEPOT:

The Rock Island’s Perry, Arkansas Depot is Moved in Advance of Restoration (Oct. 28, 2018) – During the last week of September 2018, a house moving company placed steel beams underneath the Perry depot and moved it to a temporary location until we had a new foundation ready to place the depot on. This includes photos of the moving process and inside the depot. READ MORE

Grant Money Will Ensure Former Rock Island Depot in Perry Gets Back on the Ground (April 28, 2019) – At a time when fundraising was stagnant, we got great news as the Arkansas Economic Development Commission awarded the project nearly $10,000 to create a community meeting place and museum inside the depot. READ MORE

Preparing to Place Rock Island Depot at Perry, Arkansas in New Location (Jan. 5, 2020) – Extensive work was done to build up a city-owned piece of land to place the Perry depot on. Record flooding threatened the depot in its temporary location and showed the ground where it would be placed needed to be higher than originally planed. READ MORE

Relocation Completed of Rock Island Depot in Arkansas, Now Fundraising Begins to Repair Roof (March 1, 2020) – In January, the house moving company returned to Perry and placed the depot in its new location. Then a block mason built a foundation underneath, with the depot now ready for renovations to begin. The next priority is repairing the roof. READ MORE

Hosting AETN’s Arkansas Week on Interstate 30 Expansion Project

After years of debate and public hearings, a controversial project to widen Interstate 30 through the downtowns of Little Rock and North Little Rock is getting closer to beginning. On the deadline for comments about an environmental assessment, 30 Crossing Project Director Ben Browning joined me on AETN’s “Arkansas Week” to take questions about the $632 million project. A 6.7 mile stretch of the interstate is to be remade, including replacing the Arkansas River Bridge.

I used quotes from Browning and added comments from an opponent of the project in my version of the story for KUAR, which you can read here.  Submission of the proposal to the Federal Highway Administration for approval comes at the same time as construction is getting underway on a separate project to add an additional lane in each direction to I-630 in Little Rock.

Preparing to Finally Move and Preserve the Rock Island Depot at Perry, Arkansas

The Rock Island depot at Perry on July 7, 2018. Unfortunately in the days before this photo was taken, it appears someone stole the depot sign that featured the final “The Rock” logo that had adorned this side of the depot for 43 years. Photo by Micheal Hibblen.

After a year of talks, including what seemed like a never-ending stream of new concerns being raised by different entities, it appears an effort to move and preserve the 100-year-old Rock Island Railroad depot in Perry, Arkansas is on the verge of happening. There are still a few things that will need to be finalized, but it appears we have overcome the biggest hurdle, which has been having enough insurance coverage to allay the liability concerns of the depot’s current owner.

A big thank you goes to the many people who have made donations to our project. At this point we’ve raised $5,230 through our online Go Fund Me account. We have also received checks totaling $2,601 at last report from the treasurer of the Perry County Historical & Genealogical Society. As I explain if you click on the link below, we’ll still need to raise more money after the depot is moved, but this gives us enough to pay for the insurance and make the first installment to the house-moving company.

We plan to move the depot about 150 feet to an adjacent piece of land owned by the city of Perry, which will keep it along railroad tracks and make it more likely to be eligible for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places. The goal is to turn the building into a museum to tell the history of the community, and the Rock Island’s connection to it. READ MORE.

Debuting Podcast Series “Rock Island in Arkansas”

The logo for “Rock Island in Arkansas,” which incorporates a 1972 photo taken by Bill Pollard at HH crossing in Little Rock.

For a couple of years I’ve been working on my podcast series “Rock Island In Arkansas,” though I’ve actually been recording interviews with former employees of the railroad for 30 years. The series focuses on the history of the Rock Island in the state, its operations, and features the first-hand experiences of those who worked for the railroad.

The first episode looks at the regular gatherings of former employees which continue 38 years after the Rock Island was shut down in 1980. In 2016 and 2017 I attended the annual picnics held in Sherwood, Arkansas, setting up a table to record as many stories as possible.

I also feature much of a 1988 interview I recorded with former conductor and brakeman L.T. Walker, who also served as local chairman of an employee union. He helped form the Rock Island Club in Arkansas after the railroad was no more.

EPISODE 1: Recent reunions of former Rock Island employees and a look at the career of former conductor and brakeman L.T. Walker are featured on the debut episode. Also included are interview segments with John Henderson, Jerry Oates, Bob Franklin Jr., Joe Rook, Bill K. Robbins Jr., Bill Anderson, and music from central Arkansas duo Fret & Worry.

I hope to produce a new episode of the podcast periodically and envision having a total of about 15 episodes. This first episode is only available here, but with the second episode, you should be able to subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.

Reporting on the Death of ‘Schoolhouse Rock’ Musician Bob Dorough

Bob Dorough

It’s probably safe to say most people from my generation were familiar with Bob Dorough, even if they didn’t know his name. He was musical director of Schoolhouse Rock!, the animated television series that ran during the 1970s and early ’80s on Saturday mornings between cartoons on ABC. He also wrote and sang on many of the catchy three-minute songs that taught math, grammar and civics lessons, including the songs “Three Is a Magic Number” and “Conjunction Junction.”

Dorough was born in Cherry Hill, Arkansas in 1923, grew up in Texas and became part of the New York jazz scene in the 1950s. When we got word at KUAR Monday, April 23 that he had died that day in Mount Bethel, Pennsylvania at age 94, I reached out to musicologist Stephen Koch, host of the weekly Arkansongs feature that runs on public radio stations in the state. He met Dorough several times over the years in Arkansas and recorded an interview in 2006. With the interview, Stephen’s comments and clips of his music, I prepared an obituary for KUAR, which you can read here, as well as hear a five minute report I produced for the following morning.

AUDIO: Hear my report for KUAR on the death of Bob Dorough, which aired Tuesday, April 25.

I thought I knew a lot about Dorough, but learned a lot more while reporting on this. It was sad that we’d lost another musical treasure who got his start in Arkansas, but he had a great long life! I also filed a report that aired nationally on NPR’s All Things Considered.