Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
These hunting parties often roamed across the wilderness, eating well and imbibing frequently. The state created the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission in 1915 to regulate and enforce hunting. [44] Today a significant portion of Arkansas's population participates in hunting animals such as duck and deer. Tourists also come to the state to hunt game.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
History of education in Arkansas (1900) online, a standard scholarly history. Staples, Thomas Starling. Reconstruction in Arkansas, 1862–1874. (Columbia UP, 1923). online; Stinnett, T. M. All this and tomorrow too: The evolving and continuing history of the Arkansas Education Association, a century and beyond (1969) Wilson, William Oscar.
Crocketts Bluff is an unincorporated community in Arkansas County, Arkansas, United States. [1] It is the location of (or is the nearest community to) Crocketts Bluff Hunting Lodge, which is located at the end of the dirt road north of the point at which AR 153 turns south, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [2]
County government in Arkansas is a political subdivision of the state established for a more convenient administration of justice and for purposes of providing services for the state by the Constitution of Arkansas and the Arkansas General Assembly through the Arkansas Code. In Arkansas, counties have no inherent authority, only power given to ...
Wildlife Management Areas in Arkansas Name County or counties Area (acres) Year Established Remarks Image Bayou Des Arc WMA White: 953: 1966: Created with a 320-acre public fishing lake. [2] Bayou Meto WMA Arkansas, Jefferson: 33,832: Called the "George H. Dunklin Jr. Bayou Meto WMA" and also called "Wabbaseka Scatters" or just the "Scatters". [3]
Warren School District is a public school district based in Warren, Arkansas, United States. The school district provides early childhood, elementary and secondary education from its four schools in Bradley County, Arkansas. It includes Warren and Banks. [2]
Educational attainment in Ashley County is typical for a rural Arkansas county, with a 2012 study finding 84.9% of Ashley County residents over age 25 held a high school degree or higher and 13.2% holding a bachelor's degree or higher, compared to Arkansas statewide averages of 84.8% and 21.1%.