Sultana - Center for Arkansas History and Culture - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /cahc/tag/sultana/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Wed, 09 Oct 2024 17:18:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Arts Center exhibit partners with steamboat symposium early November /cahc/2015/10/30/arts-center-exhibit-partners-with-steamboat-symposium-early-november/ Fri, 30 Oct 2015 22:00:37 +0000 https://ualrprd.wpengine.com/cahc/?p=1683 For early 20th-century artist Frederick Tanqueray (鈥淔.T.鈥) Anderson, it is hard to know what came first–his love of watercolors or his love of steamboats. Anderson found inspiration through memories of ... Arts Center exhibit partners with steamboat symposium early November

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For early 20th-century artist Frederick Tanqueray (鈥淔.T.鈥) Anderson, it is hard to know what came first–his love of watercolors or his love of steamboats.

Anderson found inspiration through memories of boyhood travels down the Mississippi River to New Orleans. In fact, many regarded him as the leading river scenes painter of all time, according to a 1945 article in The (Memphis) Commercial Appeal.

Anderson enthusiasts may once again enjoy his works through an online exhibit hosted in partnership with the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture (CAHC) and  (ASC).

Image of the painting titled the race between the Eclipse and the Princess by F T Anderson, 1911
The race between the Eclipse and the Princess by F T Anderson, 1911.

The is part of an upcoming symposium, 鈥,鈥 set for Nov. 5, at the Arkansas Studies Institute building in downtown Little Rock.

The event is free and open to the public.

鈥淚n spite of any harsh facts, including steamboats鈥 role in Native American Removal, slavery, and deforestation, his paintings bring to life an era in which these vessels changed the economy and culture of the south and the U.S.,鈥 according to Dr. Lenore Shoults of the ASC.

Shoults is scheduled to speak as part of a panel of experts who will discuss “The Life and Times of Frederick T. Anderson: Arkansas Steamboat Artist,” during the Nov. 5 symposium in the Arkansas Studies Institute building in the River Market area of Little Rock.

Anderson failed to gain significant notoriety with the exception that President Theodore Roosevelt was presented with one of his paintings during travels to Memphis in 1907, according to Shoults.

Roosevelt greatly admired the work, and subsequently, Anderson did three additional paintings for the president, including a painting of the steamboat New Orleans, captained by Nicholas Roosevelt in 1811, one of Theodore Roosevelt鈥檚 ancestors.

Anderson鈥檚 works are part of a digital exhibit presented in conjunction with the 糖心Vlog传媒LR CAHC, available at: .

His works have been exhibited only three times previously:


  • 1915 at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Craig, Bentonville



  • 1945 at the Brooks Memorial Art Gallery, now the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art



  • 1983 at the Southeast Arkansas Arts and Science Center, Pine Bluff, Arkansas, now The Arts & Science Center for Southeast Arkansas (ASC).


Anderson died Nov. 14, 1926 and is buried next to his wife in Memphis鈥 Elmwood Cemetery.

For more details on the symposium and to see the full list of scheduled speakers, visit or contact the center at 501.320.5780.

More about the steamboat symposium

The invention of Robert Fulton鈥檚 steamboat in 1807 is one of the defining moments in American history, a development that held ramifications for many states, Arkansas included.

A current exploring the steamboat鈥檚 influence on Arkansas culminates with a day-long educational symposium at the Arkansas Studies Institute building.

Among the featured symposium panelists are former U.S. Congressman Vic Snyder, who is serving on a panel discussing maritime policy and technology, as well as 糖心Vlog传媒LR History Professor Carl Moneyhon, who is contributing to the discussion on the transportation roles of steamboats.

Other scheduled guests include documentary film producer Mike Marshall, who will contribute to the discussion of the explosion of Sultana, near Marion, Ark., in 1865.

The explosion killed 1,800 people, surpassing the death toll of the Titanic by 300, earning its spot among the worst maritime disasters in U.S. history. Most Americans weren鈥檛 aware of the disaster because the media鈥檚 attention was on the April 14 assassination of President Lincoln and the manhunt for his killer.

Until it was surpassed by the railroad as the primary means of transportation after the Civil War, steamboats were a vital American resource, said Deborah Baldwin, associate provost of collections and archives.

鈥淭he goal of the symposium is to not only educate audiences about the role steamboats played during the Civil War, but to also speak to the wider role of economic, cultural, and historical development along the Mississippi River,鈥 Baldwin said.

The features historic documents, photographs, and works of art depicting steamboats, with the intent of examining the heritage of steamboats and their profound effect on the history and culture of Arkansas.

Embedded within the exhibit are web pages with for teachers. The materials are designed to meet requirements of state social studies frameworks.

The and the National Endowment for the Humanities awarded the center a $13,876 grant to develop the exhibit and the related educational symposium.

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Steamboat symposium to feature archaeology experts /cahc/2015/10/24/steamboat-symposium-to-feature-archaeology-experts/ Sat, 24 Oct 2015 20:48:49 +0000 https://ualrprd.wpengine.com/cahc/?p=1660 Two archaeologists are among the contributors participating in a day-long symposium dedicated to exploring the steamboat鈥檚 influence on Arkansas. The presenters, Lindsay Scott, who has focused her research on nautical ... Steamboat symposium to feature archaeology experts

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Two archaeologists are among the contributors participating in a day-long symposium dedicated to exploring the steamboat鈥檚 influence on Arkansas.

The presenters, Lindsay Scott, who has focused her research on nautical archaeology, and Skip Stewart-Abernathy, recently retired from the Arkansas Archaeological Survey, will present as part of the panel titled 鈥淚nto the Water: The Sinking and Recovery of Sultana.鈥

Their panel is set for 10:20 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 5, at the Arkansas Studies Institute building.

The event is part of, 鈥淎s much as the water: How steamboats shaped Arkansas,鈥 hosted by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture (CAHC) in partnership with the .

Other scheduled panelists on Nov. 5 include documentary film producer Mike Marshall, who will also contribute to the discussion of the explosion of Sultana, near Marion, Ark., in 1865.

The explosion killed 1,800 people, surpassing the death toll of the Titanic by 300, earning its spot among the worst maritime disasters in U.S. history. Most Americans weren鈥檛 aware of the disaster because the media鈥檚 attention was on the April 14 assassination of President Lincoln and the manhunt for his killer.

Until it was surpassed by the railroad as the primary means of transportation after the Civil War, steamboats were a vital American resource, according to Deborah Baldwin, associate provost of collections and archives.

About the archaeologists

Stewart-Abernathy received his undergraduate degree in history from Arkansas State University, and his Master鈥檚 and Ph.D. degrees from Brown University. He was for many years Arkansas鈥檚 primary historical archeologist, and has received many awards throughout his distinguished career, including the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Arkansas Historical Association in 2011 and the Arkansas Archeological Society鈥檚 McGimsey Preservation Award in 2014.

A native a Fort Smith, Ark., Scott earned her undergraduate degree in marketing and management at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. She conducted postgraduate work in the Program for Maritime Studies at East Carolina University in North Carolina. She is a professional scuba diver with a passion for Civil War ships. Her studies in nautical archaeology have led her to a life of adventure, but she says she always comes home to Arkansas.

About the exhibit

The invention of Robert Fulton鈥檚 steamboat in 1807 is one of the defining moments in American history, which held ramifications for many states, Arkansas included.

The virtual exhibit features historic documents, photographs, and works of art depicting steamboats with the intent of examining the heritage of steamboats and their profound effect on the history and culture of Arkansas.

Embedded within the exhibit are web pages with lesson plans and other educational materials for teachers. The materials are designed to meet requirements of state social studies frameworks.

The and the National Endowment for the Humanities awarded the center a $13,876 grant to develop the exhibit and the related educational symposium.

For more details on the symposium and see the full list of scheduled speakers, visit or contact the center at 501.320.5780.

The post Steamboat symposium to feature archaeology experts appeared first on Center for Arkansas History and Culture.

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