Creator

Date Original

2015

Description

This collection contains the condition assessment report and concept design for the John Lee Webb house at 403 Pleasant Street historic district, Hot Springs, Arkansas. This report shows how the Webb house can be updated in order to conform to the City of Hot Springs housing codes, while maintaining it's historic integrity.

Biographical/Historical Note

John L. Webb (September 17, 1877-August 30, 1946) was born in Talladega, Alabama, the son of Reverend Bazil and Henrietta Lockwood Webb. He was the Supreme Custodian of the Supreme Lodge of the Woodmen of the Union, an African American fraternal organization established in Mississippi about 1903. It was later headquartered in Hot Springs, Arkansas. The Woodmen of the Union building housed a hotel, hospital, bathhouse, bank, and a printing company, while offering insurance and hospitalization to its members. John L. Webb was a graduate of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, and was a builder and contractor by trade. He married Carrie Eleane Branson of Marianna, Arkansas, in 1905, and the couple had one daughter, Emma Elease Webb (1906-1943) who was born in Yazoo, Mississippi. The family moved to Hot Springs by 1918. Webb, who was active in many social and civic organizations, was a prominent and influential figure in Arkansas and around the country. An autobiography of his life, “Triumph of the Simple Virtues or The Life Story of John L. Webb” by Sutton E. Griggs, was published in 1926. In 1945, and after the death of their only child, Emma, John and Carrie Webb donated a building to Hot Springs’ African American community in her memory. The Emma Elease Webb Community Center is still in existence today. The Woodmen of the Union building was sold in 1948 to the National Baptist U.S.A., and was renamed the National Baptist Building. The structure, located on Malvern Avenue in Hot Springs, stands deserted today. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997. John L. Webb died on August 30, 1946, in Hot Springs, where he is buried.

Physical Description

Document, 8.5" x 11"

Geographical Area

Hot Springs, Garland County (Ark.)

Language

English

Identifier

MS.000705

Resource Type

Text

Collection

Webb House condition assessment report, MS.000705

Publisher

Arkansas State Archives

Contributing Entity

Arkansas State Archives

Recommended Citation

Webb House condition assessment report, Arkansas State Archives, Little Rock, Arkansas.

Rights

Use and reproduction of images held by the Arkansas State Archives without prior written permission is prohibited. For information on reproducing images held by the Arkansas State Archives, please call 501-682-6900 or email at state.archives@arkansas.gov.

Disciplines

United States History

COinS