Tower Building of
the Little Rock Arsenal
History
Arsenal Picture Gallery
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Shortly after Arkansas was admitted to the Union in 1836,
the federal government established the Little Rock Arsenal for the storage
of munitions and weapons in defense of the frontier. Eventually, more than
thirty buildings were constructed on this 36-acre site, including an
armory, officers' quarters, barracks for enlisted men, and a variety of
other buildings necessary for the routine operation of a military post.
Constructed in 1840, the Tower Building is the only
surviving remnant of the Little Rock Arsenal and one of central Arkansas's
oldest structures. With exterior walls almost three feet thick, the massive
edifice originally served as a munitions warehouse.
In February 1861, armed citizens threatened to seize the
arsenal in anticipation of Arkansas's secession from the Union. A
confrontation was averted when authorities negotiated a peaceful
compromise with the commander, Captain James Totten, and federal troops
withdrew from Little Rock.
After Arkansas seceded in May 1861, Confederate forces
used the arsenal until September 11, 1863, when Union troops commanded by
General Frederick Steele captured Little Rock. Renamed the Little Rock
Barracks in 1873, the post was used to garrison troops until it closed in
1890.
After the war, the
building became quarters for Arsenal officers and their families. In January 1880, Douglas MacArthur, future General of the
Army, was born here while his father, Captain Arthur MacArthur, was
stationed in Little Rock.
In 1892, the federal government traded the property to the
City of Little Rock for 1,000 acres in North Little Rock, on which Fort
Roots was built. All the structures except the Tower Building were
removed, and the federal
government transferred ownership of the site to the City of Little Rock on
the condition that the grounds be "forever exclusively devoted to the
uses and purposes of a public park."
For the next fifty years, the Tower Building remained
largely vacant and deteriorating. Finally, in the late 1930s, the
structure underwent renovation and opened in 1942 as the Museum of Natural
History and Antiquities, which occupied the building until 1997.
After another, more comprehensive renovation, the historic
structure opened in May 2001 as the MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military
History. Built for protection on a perilous frontier, this National
Historic Landmark survived the Civil War, witnessed the birth of a
military legend, and now returns to its origins as an educational facility
interpreting our state's rich military heritage.

Picture 1 - Arsenal Barracks of Little Rock

Picture 2 - Little Rock Arsenal - Ca 1890s

Picture 3 - Arsenal Building 2005
Birth of
a Military Legend: General Douglas MacArthur
From Turbulence to
Tranquility: The Little Rock Arsenal

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