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Mayflower is a city in Faulkner County, Arkansas, United States. [3] The population was 2,234 at the 2010 census , [ 4 ] up from 1,631 at the 2000 census . It is located in the Central Arkansas region.
Perry’s Funeral Chapel, known for many years as Rumph Mortuary, is a historic commercial building at 312 West Oak Street in El Dorado, Arkansas.Built in 1927, it is a two-story red brick building, with a three-bay facade topped by a crenellated Gothic parapet.
Funeral homes arrange services in accordance with the wishes of surviving friends and family, whether immediate next of kin or an executor so named in a legal will. The funeral home often takes care of the necessary paperwork, permits, and other details, such as making arrangements with the cemetery, and providing obituaries to the news media ...
Allyse Worland is a first-generation funeral director licensed in Indiana and Kentucky. More young women are now enrolling in mortuary schools as the industry faces a labor shortage.
The chapel was commissioned by John A. Cooper, Sr. to honor Mildred Borum Cooper, his late wife. [2] The chapel was designed to celebrate both God and his creations. [3] Located on a wooded site along Lake Norwood, the chapel has become a popular tourist destination in Northwest Arkansas. It is also popular as a venue for wedding ceremonies.
For some years before the turn of the century, she made her home in the Ozarks of Arkansas. [11] Elizabeth Bunnell Read died in Fayetteville, Arkansas, May 22, 1909, [12] and is interred in Riverview Cemetery in Algona, Iowa. [13] A note in the May 26, 1909 edition of the Upper Des Moines Republican stated:— [13]
From the time she married Prince Charles in 1981, Princess Diana was a beloved figure in Britain, but few could have imagined the outpouring of grief that followed her death at age 36.As news ...
Lake City Mayor, President Clinton appointee to Arkansas Public Service Commission (APSC) [15] Nan Snow (1936–) 2023 Civic activist for women's issues; a founder and charter member of the UCA Women's Giving Circle [16] Joyce Williams Warren (1949–) 2023 Arkansas’ first black female judge, and multiple other firsts for black women [17]