Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Other days

-

100 YEARS AGO

March 2, 1924

▪ Petitions for release under a writ of habeas corpus, filed by six of the negroes of Phillips county, convicted of murder as result of the Elaine uprising of 1919, were dismissed through an order of abatement issued by Judge Jacob Trieber in United States District Court yesterday. The cause of the order was lack of prosecutio­n, it was said. The six negroes are: Frank Moore, Ed and Frank Hicks, J. E. Knox, Ed Coleman and Paul Hall. They originally were given death sentences, and after twice receiving new trials, through decisions of the Supreme Court, the sentences were commuted to 12 years imprisonme­nt by Governor McRae November 5, 1923. The petition for writs of habeas corpus have been pending since 1921.

50 YEARS AGO

March 2, 1974

CUMMINS PRISON FARM — Sixteen employees at Cummins Prison Farm, including more than half the profession­al farming staff, resigned Friday in the wake of continued criticism of the current prison administra­tion. There are a total of 159 employees at the farm. The employees were critical of Cummins Superinten­dent A. L. (Art) Lockhart and farm administra­tor Rex McClaren. … Lockhart said he didn’t believe the grievances that some cited were justified. “I have done everything possible to look into the situation,” he added.

25 YEARS AGO

March 2, 1999

WEST HELENA — Johnny Weaver, 47, a retired West Helena firefighte­r, was declared Monday the winner of a disputed mayoral runoff, making him the city’s first black mayor. In a long-awaited decision, Special Circuit Judge Kim Smith ruled that Weaver received the majority of votes in the Nov. 24 runoff, with 1,384 to incumbent Mayor Riley Porter’s 1,316. … Weaver becomes the fourth black in a major east Arkansas town to win the latest mayoral general election. He joins Robert Miller Jr. of Helena and Larry Bryant of Forrest City, both elected mayor for the first time in November, and Robert Taylor of Marianna, re-elected mayor.

10 YEARS AGO

March 2, 2014

▪ By Saturday evening, crews had nearly finished demolishin­g the far-right portion of the historic Majestic Hotel that caught fire Thursday in Hot Springs and burned for nearly 48 hours. Workers started tearing down the building Friday afternoon after the flames were pushed back to the structure’s center. More heavy equipment was moved in Saturday to finish the job. … Majestic Hotel owner Garrison Hassenflu, a developer from Kansas City, Mo., arrived in Hot Springs on Saturday morning and spent the day meeting with city officials and environmen­tal technician­s. … Owners closed the Majestic Hotel in 2006, and Hassenflu’s company — Park Residences Developmen­t LLC — acquired the property in 2012 after a nonprofit failed to turn it into a mix of retail space, apartments and condominiu­ms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States