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Farm No. 266—Johnny Cash Boyhood Home was the home of singer-songwriter Johnny Cash from 1935 to 1950. Cash moved with his family to a rural community in Mississippi County, Arkansas. [2] The farm house was built in 1934 in a government project to help boost the economy. The Cash family joined the community in March 1935.
It was the boyhood home of country singer Johnny Cash. As of the 2020 census , the population of Dyess was 339, [ 3 ] down from 410 in 2010 . Main Street in Dyess
Johnny Cash's boyhood home in Dyess was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on May 2, 2018, as "Farm No. 266, Johnny Cash Boyhood Home." [ 27 ] The Arkansas Country Music Awards honored Johnny Cash's legacy with the Lifetime Achievement award on June 3, 2018.
Johnny Cash's values were sown on his family's Arkansas cotton farm, but his star was born on the Louisiana Hayride in Shreveport, Louisiana.
Cash was born in Kingsland before his family moved to Dyess in east Arkansas. After moving away for much of his professional career, Cash returned in 1968 to play the “Johnny Cash Homecoming ...
English: Cash's boyhood home in Dyess, Arkansas, where he lived from the age of three in 1935 until he finished high school in 1950; the property, pictured here in 2021, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places
The statue of Cash joins the Capitol on behalf of his home state Arkansas, which voted to replace its two existing statues in 2019, ones that have stood in the Capitol on behalf of the state for ...
Kingsland, officially the City of Kingsland, is a small city in Cleveland County, south central Arkansas, United States. It is included in the Pine Bluff, Arkansas Metropolitan Statistical Area, and had a population of 447 at the 2010 U.S. census. It is known as the birthplace of musician Johnny Cash. His parents had a cotton farm there.