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His daughter, Mary Scott Chambers Grubbs, later became the first woman to be licensed as a mortician in the State of Kentucky, and continued the business as the Chambers-Grubbs Funeral Home with her husband, Wallace K. Grubbs. The highway linking US 25 in Walton to Interstate 75 is named in honor of Mary Grubbs.
Current View is an unincorporated community in Clay County, Arkansas and Ripley County, Missouri, United States. [1] The community straddles the Missouri–Arkansas border on the northeast bank of the Current River. Arkansas Highway 211 connects to the south and Missouri Route E is to the north.
The Dr. James Wyatt Walton House is a historic house at 301 West Sevier in Benton, Arkansas. It is a two-story wood-frame structure, with clapboard siding and a brick foundation. It has irregular massing, with a central section topped by a high hipped roof, from which a series of two-story gabled sections project.
Grubbs is a city [3] in Jackson County, Arkansas, United States. The population was 386 at the 2010 census. The population was 386 at the 2010 census. Geography
Chambers House, or Chambers Farmstead, or Chambers Farm, or Chambers Barn or variations, may refer to the following in the United States: Chambers-Robinson House , Sheffield, Alabama, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Colbert County, Alabama
As of the 2020 census, the population was 4,739, [1] making it the least populous county in Arkansas. The county seat is Hampton. [2] Calhoun County is Arkansas's 55th county, formed on December 6, 1850, and named for John C. Calhoun, a Vice President of the United States. The county is part of the Camden, AR Micropolitan Statistical Area.
Waldron was reached by the Arkansas Western Railroad from Heavener, Oklahoma in 1901. [8] Later called the Arkansas Western Railway , a subsidiary of and subsequently incorporated into the Kansas City Southern , the line is now leased to and operated by the Arkansas Southern Railroad .
Marion H. Crank, Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives, 1963–1964; Democratic gubernatorial nominee, 1968; resided in Foreman, interred there at Holy Cross Cemetery [20] Jeff Davis, Democratic United States Senator from Arkansas and the 20th Governor of the U.S. state of Arkansas [21]