Donate
Contact Us
Sign Up for Email Updates
Visit The Museum
  • Hours & Location
  • Tour Options
  • Events Calendar
  • Photo Gallery
  • Special Events
  • What's New
  • Press Releases
Exhibits
  • Now Showing
  • Online Tour
  • Permanent Exhibits
  • Featured Collections
  • Traveling Exhibits
  • Facility Rentals
  • Outreach
  • Online Exclusives
Collections
  • Podcasts
  • History of a Landmark
  • Exhibits Archive
  • For Classroom
  • Activities/Games/Quizzes
Education
  • Photo Gallery
  • eMuseum
  • Columns
Support the Museum
  • Make a Donation
  • Planned Giving
  • Donate to Our Collection
  • Join OSHMA/1836 Club
  • Volunteer
Museum Store
  • Postcards, Posters & Prints
  • Old State House Souvenirs
  • Books & Music
  • Civil War & Military History
 
 
 
Product Navigation
Now Showing
  • Things You Need to Hear: Growing Up in Arkansas
Online Tour
  • First Floor - Online Tour
  • Second Floor - Online Tour
Permanent Exhibits
  • "As Long as Life Shall Last:" The Legacy of Arkansas Women
  • Pillars of Power
  • On the Stump: Arkansas Political History
  • 1836 House of Representatives Chamber
  • First Families: Mingling of Politics and Culture
  • Period Rooms
Featured Collections
  • Arkansas State Police
  • First Ladies' Gowns
  • African-American Quilts
  • Civil War Battle Flags
  • Arkansas Art Pottery
  • Thompson Drawings
Traveling Exhibits
  • Arkansas, Arkansaw
  • Arkansas Department of Correction
  • Badges, Bandits, and Bars
  • Civil War 150
  • Drawing on Arkansas Politics
  • From Rangers to Troopers
  • "Outside the Pale" - The Architecture of Fay Jones
Facility Rentals
  • Trapnall Hall
  • Old State House Museum
Outreach
  • Outreach for School Groups
  • Outreach for Civic, Church or Social Groups
Online Exclusives
  • Words & Images by LeeNora Parlor
  • Ernie Deane's Arkansas Photographs
  • Hard Times: Arkansas Depression Era Photos
  • Slave Narratives
  • Biographies of Arkansas's Governors
Video Gallery
Connect With Us
Google Maps
Facebook
You Tube
Podcasts
Collections Blog
eMuseum
 
Printer Friendly
Bookmark and Share
Skip Navigation LinksHomepage » Explore » Featured Collections » Arkansas State Police
 

Arkansas State Police Collection

The Original Thirteen Arkansas Rangers at Headquarters once located in the Old State House, 1936, Old State House Museum Collection. 

72 years of Arkansas criminal justice history and memorabilia are welcomed to the Old State House Museum as it proudly announces its most recent major acquisition, the Arkansas State Police Collection.

A chapter of Arkansas history began in March, 1935 when Governor J.M. Futrell signed Act 120 into law, creating a state police force. Initially known as the Arkansas Rangers, the state police then consisted of thirteen men who were headquartered in three rooms in the east wing of the Old State House, then known as the War Memorial Building. That little-known aspect of Arkansas’s past doesn’t even begin to hint at the scope of the history and heritage that will now be headquartered at the Old State House Museum with the recent acquisition of the Arkansas State Police Collection. Museum director Bill Gatewood explains, “The Museum will devote considerable resources to maintaining the integrity of these objects and document information that describes their significance. We will also increase public access to them via Museum exhibits, publications, educational programs and a presence on the Old State House Museum’s website. The website is viewed by almost 1,000,000 visitors each year, so the Arkansas State Police collection will receive wide exposure.”

The collection is located at the Old State House Museum through a partnership with the Arkansas State Police Museum. This ensures that artifacts in the collection receive state-of-the-art, museum-quality conservation and care, while also providing the public with access to the collection through special exhibits curated by the museum, educational programs, and the museum’s website.

Several artifacts from the Arkansas State Police collection may be viewed within the Pillars of Power exhibit; many more were featured as part of the museum’s recent exhibit, Badges, Bandits & Bars: Arkansas Law & Justice.

Visit the Arkansas State Police website at www.asp.arkansas.gov/.


Next: First Ladies' Gowns »

 
 

Old State House Museum · 300 W. Markham · Little Rock, AR 72201
phone: 501.324.9685 · email: info@oldstatehouse.org
Copyright ©2012 Old State House. All rights reserved. Photos may not be reproduced without written permission of the director. Funded in part by the Arkansas Natural and Cultural Resources Council.

The Old State House Museum is a museum of The Department of Arkansas Heritage.

Department of Arkansas Heritage
Delta Cultural Center
Historic Arkansas Museum
Old Statehouse Museum
Mosaic Templars Cultural Center
Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission
Arkansas Arts Council
Arkansas Historic Preservation Program

Web Services by Aristotle Web Design.

Site Map |  Mobile Site