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Combination of the Arkansas Weekly Times and Arkansas Advocate [15] Arkansas Traveler: Bentonville 1868 1869 [16] Arkansas Union: Siloam Springs 1890 1890 [11] Arkansas Weekly Times: Little Rock 1835 1837 Known as the Little Rock Times, 1835-1836 [17] Ashley County Eagle: Hamburg 1889 1920 Successor to the El Dorado Eagle, merged with the ...
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Montgomery County is a county in the U.S. state of Arkansas. As of the 2020 census, the population was 8,484. [1] The county seat is Mount Ida. [2] Montgomery County is Arkansas's 45th county, formed on December 9, 1842, and named after Richard Montgomery, an American Revolutionary War general. [3]
In Congress, Arkansas has been represented by two Republican senators (John Boozman and Tom Cotton) since January 3, 2015, ending a long history of Democratic hegemony.In the House of Representatives, Black Springs and Montgomery County is within the Arkansas 4th district, which contains almost the entire southwestern half of the state.
National Register of Historic Places listings in Montgomery County, Arkansas; M. USS Montgomery County This page was last edited on 5 July 2023, at 15:44 (UTC). Text ...
Caddo Hills School District 28 is a public school district based in unincorporated Montgomery County, Arkansas, United States, with a Norman mailing address. [2] [3] The district encompasses 320.04 square miles (828.9 km 2) of land [citation needed] of Montgomery County, [citation needed] including all or portions of the municipalities of Norman and Black Springs, along with small pieces of ...
Mauldin or Mauldin Logging Camp is a ghost town in Montgomery County, Arkansas, United States.It is classified as a populated place. [1] Established in 1918 by Billy Mauldin in cooperation with Thomas Rosborough, it became heavily populated by 1922 by workers drawn to industries cutting and processing virgin timber in the area.
Clark County and later from Montgomery County (prior 1880) Naturally occurring hot springs within the county [Note 1] 33,258: 622.16 sq mi (1,611 km 2) Howard County: 061: Nashville: Apr 17, 1873: Pike, Hempstead, Polk, Sevier counties. James H. Howard, a state senator: 12,533: 595.20 sq mi (1,542 km 2) Independence County: 063: Batesville: Oct ...