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Irven D. McDaniel (1894-1960) was an architect based in Arkansas and Tennessee and Irven G. McDaniel was his son and also an architect who practiced in Hot Springs, Arkansas. The senior Irven was born Irven Donald McDaniel on April 14, 1894, in Holland, Faulkner County, Arkansas. [1] He married Camille Lewis, of Arkansas, in 1920.
The Sun-Times: Heber Springs: Weekly Paxton Media Group The Helena World: Helena-West Helena: 1871 Weekly Helena World Chronicle, LLC www.helenaworld.org Hot Springs Village Voice: Hot Springs Village: 1990 Weekly J. Allen, LLC hsvvoice.com The Chicot County Spectator/Eudora Enterprise: Lake Village: Weekly Arkansas Times: Little Rock: Weekly
Canada, Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park, British Columbia — McConnell died from injuries while defending herself and her 13-year-old son Kelly from a black bear attack on a boardwalk to the hot springs. Kitchen heard the attack in progress, and was killed while attempting to rescue.
In 2002, Red Bear founded the Teton Times in McLaughlin, South Dakota. [2] [4] The Teton Times primarily serves the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, which is composed of the Lakota and Dakota nations of the Standing Rock Reservation [4]: 8 The Teton Times publishes a weekly print paper and maintains a Facebook page, but does not have an official ...
The Hollywood Cemetery is the oldest cemetery in Hot Springs, Arkansas. The cemetery was established sometime prior to the American Civil War, with its oldest marked grave dating to 1856. It is located southeast of downtown Hot Springs, and is bounded by Hollywood Avenue, Mote Street, and Shady Grove Road.
The Hot Springs Sentinel-Record is a newspaper in Hot Springs, Arkansas, currently privately owned by WEHCO Media, Inc.. Known often and/or historically as Sentinel-Record, or S-R, it emerged as the survivor as a daily newspaper out of multiple newspapers competing in Hot Springs in the late 1800s, which eventually merged in effect; the paper's lineage can be traced to the Daily Sentinel ...
The Best Obituaries from Legendary New York Times Reporter Robert McG. Thomas. [4] The author of a starred Kirkus Review of 52 McGs wrote, "For the last half of the 1990s, readers of the New York Times could be excused if they searched out Thomas's work before they bothered with the front-page lead. Known as 'McGs.'—after the veteran reporter ...
The county includes Hot Springs National Park, the only national park in the state of Arkansas as well as the first property to be protected under federal legislation. A law was passed in 1832 supported by President Andrew Jackson to preserve this area, even before Arkansas was admitted as a state. Hot Springs National Park, located in Garland ...