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English: A series of United States Indian reservation locator maps, constructed mostly with Tiger/LINE and BIA open data, with supplements from the Canadian and Mexican censuses. Generated on July 24, 2019.
As of 2020 census, the Memphis metropolitan area had a population of 1,389,905 [1] The Forrest City, Arkansas Micropolitan area was added to the Memphis area in 2012 to form the Memphis–Forrest City Combined Statistical area. In 2023 the Clarksdale, Mississippi Micropolitan area was also added to form the new Memphis-Clarksdale-Forrest City ...
Berclair-Jackson; Binghampton; Nutbush; Raleigh; Sycamore View; ... Memphis metropolitan area This page was last edited on 7 January 2025, at 03:11 (UTC). Text is ...
Crittenden County, Arkansas, 1936. Crittenden County is a county located in the U.S. state of Arkansas. As of the 2020 census, the population was 48,163. [1] The county seat is Marion, [2] and the largest city is West Memphis. Crittenden County is part of the Memphis, TN-MS-AR Metropolitan Statistical Area.
U.S. Route 70 (US 70) enters the state of Tennessee from Arkansas via the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge in Memphis, and runs west to east across 21 counties in all three Grand Divisions of Tennessee, with a total length of 478.48 miles (770.04 km), to end at the North Carolina state line in eastern Cocke County.
Newport Municipal Airport covers an area of 331 acres (134 ha) at an elevation of 239 feet (73 m) above mean sea level. It has two runways , 4/22 and 18/36, each with a concrete surface measuring 5,002 by 150 feet (1,525 x 46 m).
Jackson County is home to seven incorporated towns and four incorporated cities, including Newport, the largest city and county seat. The county is also the site of numerous unincorporated communities and ghost towns. Occupying 633.94 square miles (164,190 ha), Jackson County is the 41st largest county of the 75 in Arkansas.
At its beginning, the area originally was not a part of Memphis, but was annexed into the city in the late 1950s or early 1960s. [2] Waring Road, which runs through Berclair, is named for George E. Waring, Jr., the innovative sanitary engineer who designed the drainage system that ended the era of yellow fever epidemics in 19th-century Memphis.