Little Rock Train Station May Be Railroaded
for Clinton Library

Readers seek help for preservation emergencies
/ Nov. 20, 2001

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Choctaw station was
demolished Nov. 21, 2001
(Bill
Pollard)
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Dear Preservation 911,
The 102-year-old Choctaw Oklahoma & Gulf Railroad freight
station in Little Rock, Ark., is in imminent danger of demolition
for the future construction of the Clinton Presidential Library.
This structure now sits intact, and in remarkably well-preserved
condition, within a modern warehouse that was built around it.
The Choctaw freight station is the last surviving example
of the traditional two-story brick freight station in Arkansas.
It is a companion structure to the adjacent Choctaw passenger
station. Together, both structures provide a unique perspective
on railroads' efforts to further both aspects of their transportation
business in 1900passenger and freight traffic. In the late 1890s, the Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf Railroad
was one of this region's major players during the railroad
expansion era. In 1899, the company moved their general
headquarters to Little Rock, and the passenger and freight
stations constructed later that year were given extra architectural
attention because they were considered the "flagship"
structures of the new company in its national headquarters
city. (Little Rock had previously been dominated by a competing
railroad owned by Jay Gould and his associates.)
Unless public interest persuades the City of Little
Rock and the Clinton Library Foundation to modify the presidential
library blueprints, the Choctaw freight station will be razed
so that a below ground archival "bunker" and a parking
lot can be placed where the station now stands. The
Friends of the Choctaw Terminal Web site provides additional
information as well as e-mail links to both the City of Little
Rock and the Clinton Library Foundation.
The controversy over the Choctaw freight station may have
preservation implications far beyond this building. Efforts
have been made to require the City of Little Rock to comply
with the Section 106 review process mandated by the National
Historic Preservation Act of 1966, since the ultimate user
of this site, the Clinton Presidential Library, will interact
with and receive assistance from numerous federal agencies.
Section 106 was designed to protect historic properties
that might be adversely affected by a broad range of federal
activities, and failure to comply will establish a dangerous
precedent of circumventing the intent of Section 106. If
the Choctaw freight station is lost, private developers
in the future may again choose the "Little Rock strategy,"
attempting to demolish a historic property before the site
comes under the protection of Section 106.
Sincerely,
Bill Pollard
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