George Rollie Adams

[3] The Strong also acquired the National Toy Hall of Fame and established the International Center for the History of Electronic Games, World Video Game Hall of Fame,[4] Brian Sutton-Smith Library and Archives of Play, Woodbury School, and American Journal of Play.

in Social Science Education and English from Louisiana Tech University, he taught history for four years at El Dorado, Arkansas, High School.

[6] At The Strong, Adams introduced a boundary-less organizational structure, led two major physical expansions, and earned recognition for innovation in entrepreneurial museum management.

Adams’s latest books are Found in Pieces and South of Little Rock, historical novels set during the civil rights movement.

His previous published works include Ordinary People and Everyday Life, co-edited with James B. Gardner (American Association for State and Local History, 1980); Nashville: A Pictorial History, co-authored with Ralph Jerry Christian (The Donning Company, 1981, 1988); and General William S. Harney: Prince of Dragoons (University of Nebraska Press, 2001).