Stamp, "Remember Little Rock" - Governor Orval Faubus

 
Skip to main content
Collections Menu
Gov. Faubus' "Remember Little Rock" stamp
Stamp, "Remember Little Rock" - Governor Orval Faubus
Gov. Faubus' "Remember Little Rock" stamp
Gov. Faubus' "Remember Little Rock" stamp

Stamp, "Remember Little Rock" - Governor Orval Faubus

Object number2003.087.05.9
Dateca. 1955
Mediumrubber
Dimensions3 x 1 9/16 in. (7.6 x 4 cm)
Credit LineOld State House Museum Collection
Terms
    DescriptionStamp made by Moros Stamps in Alexandria, Louisiana. The stamp says "Remember Little Rock" and depicts a National Guardsman with his rifle standing behind two students. Commemorating the desegregation of Central High School.

    Oravl Eugene Faubus was born on January 7, 1910 in Madison County. In 1955, he defeated Pratt Remmel for the governorship becoming the thirty-sixth governor of Arkansas. While in office Faubus improved public education including pay increases for teachers, began an overhaul of the State Hospital for the mentally ill, built the Arkansas Children’s Colony, expanded state parks, and paved hundreds of miles of highway. The defining moment of Faubus’ political career was the desegregation of Central High School in September in 1957. On September 2 Faubus called the National Guard to arms to prevent the admission of nine black students to Central High School on the basis that violence threatened and the National Guard was needed to preserve the peace. A federal judge ordered the removal of the National Guard. After local police were unable to control the crowds at Central High School, President Dwight D. Eisenhower deployed the National Guard in order to restore order and enforce the court’s ruling. In a vain attempt to stop further integration, Little Rock voted to close its schools for the following year, however, bad publicity and economic decline led to the schools being reopened with token integration. He left office in 1967, and died on December 14, 1994.
    Status
    Not on view