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Garland County is Arkansas' 68th county, formed during the Reconstruction era on April 5, 1873, from portions of Hot Spring, Montgomery, and Saline counties. [6] It was named for Augustus H. Garland, eleventh governor of Arkansas. [7] [8] It is the only county in the United States with this name.
Air quality officials in Southern California announced the first no-burn day of the 2024-25 season Friday as the Mountain fire burns. Mountain fire fouls the air, forcing a wood-burning ban just ...
Sep. 18—Staff report The lack of rain this summer has led to drought conditions in southern Ohio and now Lawrence County is among 27 counties where opening burn is now banned. State Fire Marshal ...
Izard County and then later from Lawrence County (prior 1850) William S. Fulton (1795–1844), the last Governor of the Arkansas Territory prior to statehood 12,421: 620.32 sq mi (1,607 km 2) Garland County: 051: Hot Springs: Apr 5, 1873: Montgomery, Hot Spring, and Saline counties: Augustus Hill Garland (1832–1899), U.S. Senator and 11th ...
Garland County, Arkansas (7 C, 6 P) Grant County, Arkansas (7 C, 3 P) Greene County, Arkansas (6 C, 4 P) H. Hempstead County, Arkansas (6 C, 10 P)
A 10-acre woodland fire was reported in Wayne County. Burning is not advised.
Unless a town or county ordinance prohibits its, use of a grill for cooking is allowed. The N.C. Forest Service’s ban doesn’t apply to burning within 100 feet of an occupied dwelling, where ...