Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It was known as Baxter County Airport until 2005. [3] It changed its name back to Baxter County Airport due to confusion with the close proximity of Ozark, Arkansas and Ozark, Missouri, both of which have airports. The airport used to be served by Lone Star Airlines, which operated services to Dallas-Fort Worth International in the mid-1990s.
Gaston's Airport (FAA LID: 3M0) is a public use airport located one nautical mile (2 km) south of the central business district of Lakeview, a city in Baxter County, Arkansas, United States. [1] It is privately owned by Gaston's White River Resort [1] and is also known as Gaston's White River Resort Airstrip. [2]
The county contains one public owned/public use airport: Baxter County Airport, a small, rural airport west of Mountain Home with over 11,000 annual operations, almost entirely general aviation. [58] The county contains three private airfields, including Gaston's White River Resort Airstrip, which is available for public use.
Ozark Regional Airport (Baxter County Airport) GA 0 Nashville: M77: Howard County Airport: GA 0 Newport: M19: Newport Municipal Airport: GA 0 Osceola: 7M4: Osceola Municipal Airport: GA 0 Ozark: 7M5: Ozark - Franklin County Airport: GA 0 Paragould: PGR: KPGR Kirk Field: GA 0 Paris / Subiaco: 7M6: Paris Municipal Airport: GA 0 Piggott: 7M7 ...
Mountain Home is a city in and the county seat of Baxter County, Arkansas, United States, [3] in the southern Ozark Mountains near the northern state border with Missouri.As of the 2010 census, the city had a population of 12,448. [4]
Pages in category "Transportation in Baxter County, Arkansas" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Baxter sold its BioPharma Solutions business in October for $4.25 billion to investment firms. The new company, Simtra, wants to expand.
Cotter and Baxter County are within the Springfield, Missouri TV market. The city has been home to five newspapers over the years, the longest lasting being the Cotter Courier (1903-c. 1918) [ 16 ] and The Cotter Record (1911-1937). [ 17 ]