Kirk Wins Susie Pryor Award for Research

Dr. John Kirk
Dr. John Kirk

Dr. John A. Kirk, George W. Donaghey Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, has been awarded the Susie Pryor Award for his article examining the case of Mary Dinwiddie, the only African American woman sentenced to death in Arkansas during the 20th century.

Kirk received the award April 11 during the 84th Annual Arkansas Historical Association Conference at the U.S. Marshals Museum in Fort Smith. Sponsored by the Arkansas Women’s History Institute, the award includes a $1,000 prize and publication in an upcoming edition of Arkansas Historical Quarterly.

“I am delighted to receive the award,” Kirk said. “Susie Pryor was a pioneer as the first woman to run for political office in Arkansas after women received the right to vote in 1920 and one of the first women to hold a seat on a local school board. Her legacy continued to shape Arkansas politics through her son, former Senator David Pryor, and her grandson, former Senator Mark Pryor.”

Kirk’s article explores a largely overlooked chapter in the state’s legal history. Dinwiddie, a domestic worker, was convicted of murdering a white man in North Little Rock in 1940 and sentenced to death in her Pulaski County Circuit Court trial. On appeal, the Arkansas Supreme Court reduced her sentence to 21 years in prison. Dinwiddie’s case sheds new light on how Arkansas courts navigated issues of gender, race, and the death penalty in the Jim Crow Era.

Kirk’s research began with a case file found in the digitized NAACP papers. He has made extensive use of the NAACP papers in his teaching and research. His students in the university’s graduate program in public history have co-authored award-winning papers using the archive. Their work has earned recognition from the Arkansas Historical Association, including the Lucille Westbrook Award in 2022 and 2024 and the Violet B. Gingles Award in 2023.

Kirk plans to present his award-winning research as part of the UA Little Rock Department of History’s Evenings with History speaker series during the next academic year.