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The Sumner–White Dipping Vat is a historic concrete cattle dipping vat in Ashley County, Arkansas. It is located about four miles northeast of the intersection of U.S. Highway 82 and County Road 69, half a mile in the woods northeast of the Sumner-White Hunt Club. The vat is a concrete structure about 27 feet (8.2 m) long, 4 feet (1.2 m) wide ...
Northwest Arkansas Mall. The history of shopping malls in Arkansas began in 1970 with the opening of Phoenix Village Mall in Fort Smith. [1] As of 2016, the state has 21 malls and lifestyle centers. Six malls, including Phoenix Village, have been demolished or converted to other uses. The biggest mall is Central Mall in Fort Smith; it has 141 ...
Containing boutiques, restaurants, music venues, museums, condos, the visitor center, and a convention center, the square has both historic structures and new constructions. The farmers' market began in 1974 and runs 7am to 1pm from the first Saturday in April through the last Saturday before Thanksgiving set in the Fayetteville Historic Square ...
Originally a purebred Black Angus farm in Campbellsburg, Kentucky, Creekstone Farms entered the processing business in 2003 with the purchase of a 450,000-square-foot (42,000 m 2) processing plant in Arkansas City, Kansas. The company began processing Creekstone Farms Premium Black Angus cattle in May 2003.
The Cogburn Dipping Vat is a historic former cattle dipping facility in Ouachita National Forest, west of Black Spring, Arkansas.It is located about 19 metres (62 ft) west of Forest Road 73 and south of a perennial stream.
In northwest Arkansas, Tyson Foods is one-third of a trifecta of Fortune 500 companies and major employers: Walmart, Tyson Foods, and trucking giant J.B. Hunt; it’s the third largest employer in ...
Billstown (also Bills Town, Bills) is an unincorporated community in Pike County, Arkansas, United States. [1] [2] Billstown is located on Arkansas Highway 301 near the Little Missouri River. First settled in 1858, [3] Billstown has active timber and some cattle farming.
It is located south of Square Rock Creek, off a forest road that runs south from County Road 94. It is a partially buried U-shaped concrete structure, with a concrete pad at one end, through which cattle were directed to dip them with chemical treatment for Texas tick fever. A barbed-wire holding pen of uncertain age stands nearby.