For Immediate Release

Oct. 8, 2025

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John Lyon
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THE LATE REV. HEZEKIAH D. STEWART HONORED WITH DR. TOM BRUCE ARKANSAS HEALTH IMPACT AWARD

Award Presented by ACHI Health Policy Board Recognizes Outstanding Impacts on Health of Arkansans

LITTLE ROCK ― The board of the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement on Tuesday honored the late Rev. Hezekiah D. Stewart with the Dr. Tom Bruce Arkansas Health Impact Award. The annual award recognizes an individual who has had outstanding impacts on the health of Arkansans.

Stewart served as pastor at Mount Nebo African Methodist Episcopal Church in Little Rock’s College Station community from 1976 to 2001 and at Moody Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Little Rock from 2001 until his retirement in 2016. In 1978, he founded the Watershed Human and Community Development Agency. Described as the state’s first “social hospital,” the Watershed continues to provide food, clothing, transportation, job guidance, transportation and more to Arkansans in need of those services, with the goal of allowing them to build healthy, productive and fulfilling lives.

Stewart’s service to the community was not limited to the Watershed. In the 1990s, he received national attention for his work helping gang-involved youth transcend cycles of violence. In 1997, after a tornado struck College Station, killing five people and damaging more than 75 homes, Stewart worked tirelessly with state and federal officials to provide relief, including arranging a visit by then President Bill Clinton to tour the affected area. In honor of Stewart’s 79th birthday, the city of Little Rock proclaimed Oct. 14, 2021, as Rev. Hezekiah David Stewart Day. Stewart died in 2023.

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“Throughout his life, Rev. Stewart demonstrated an unwavering commitment to improving the health and well-being of the most vulnerable Arkansans,” said ACHI Interim President and CEO Craig Wilson. “He also had an unmatched talent for bringing people together from across all walks of life to address fundamental needs in the community. One of those people was the late Dr. Tom Bruce, whom Rev. Stewart knew and worked with and for whom this award is named. On behalf of the ACHI Health Policy Board, I am proud to announce the late Rev. Hezekiah Stewart as the 2025 recipient of the Dr. Tom Bruce Arkansas Health Impact Award.”

Stewart’s widow, Diane Stewart, accepted the award for her late husband during the annual Friends of ACHI Appreciation Event, which was held Tuesday evening at the Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock.

Bruce, dean of the UAMS College of Medicine for more than a decade and a pioneer in the field of community-based public health, was a national leader in community health and a champion of rural health and health system improvement in Arkansas. The award named for Bruce recognizes individuals who embody his lifetime of service by demonstrating courageous leadership, serving as catalysts for improving the health of all Arkansans, and exemplifying the core values of ACHI: trust, commitment, innovation and initiative.

ACHI is a nonpartisan, independent health policy center that serves as a catalyst for improving the health of all Arkansans through evidence-based research, public issue advocacy and collaborative program development.

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