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Arkansas Travel

Hotels Near Restaurants and Lounges in Arkansas

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Find Information About Arkansas

In pioneer days Arkansas was known as the Bear State. Then the Native Americans who first farmed and hunted the land were driven westward, and the sloths (packs) of brown bears began to disappear too--along with the once-abundant bison, panthers, and wolves. Now numerous bears again roam the forested hills of Arkansas and leave their tracks in the mountain snow. Wildlife is plentiful, and Arkansas claims to lead the states in fishable lakes and streams. Scenic attractions--the Ozark Mountains, hot mineral springs, and limestone caverns--have made the state a family vacationland.

Arkansas has two national forests--Ouachita and Ozark. The original Ouachita tract has been greatly expanded since its boundaries were defined in 1907. Quick-growing shortleaf pine predominates in the area of the former Arkansas National Forest. The somewhat smaller Ozark National Forest, which was created in 1908 in northwest Arkansas, has pine and hardwood. The forests of Arkansas have made lumber and wood products and pulpwood and paper some of the state's leading industries. More vital are the farms of the Mississippi Floodplain and the Gulf Coastal Plain.

A mild climate, long growing season, fertile soil, and ample rainfall helped make Arkansas a place where most people were close to the land in the past. Its small homesteads and large plantations created a major agricultural region soon after it became a state in 1836. But the modernization of farming methods has gradually released laborers from the soil. Now the number of Arkansas workers in manufacturing surpasses the national average, and that industry accounts for one third of the state's gross product.

In a roundabout way Arkansas was named for a Siouan-speaking people who left their allied tribes to journey south on the Mississippi River. They were known as the Ugakhpa, or Quapaw, meaning those going downstream or with the current. The present spelling, as well as the foreign pronunciation of Kansas, came from early French explorers. The state General Assembly officially subtitled Arkansas the Wonder State in 1923 to reflect its wealth of resources. Thirty years later the state legislature adopted the official nickname Land of Opportunity because of the future outlook for the development of business, industry, and agriculture. In addition to the nickname Bear State, during the frontier era Arkansas was known as the Bowie State due to the heavy use of bowie knives for hunting there. Other nicknames were the Toothpick State (an allusion to the knives), the Hot Water State (for its hot springs), and the Guinea Pig State (for its willingness to be used as a proving ground for government experiments in agriculture during the 1930s).

Arkansas lies in the south-central part of the United States. It is bounded on the north by Missouri, on the west by Oklahoma, on the southwest by Texas, and on the south by Louisiana. On the east the Mississippi River separates it from Mississippi and Tennessee. The state's greatest length, from east to west, is 275 miles (443 kilometers). Its greatest width, from north to south, is 245 miles (394 kilometers). The total area of Arkansas is 53,187 square miles (137,754 square kilometers). This includes 1,109 square miles (2,872 square kilometers) of inland water surface.


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Arkansas News and Information


 

Arkansas News

Arkansas News Bureau (Arkansas News Bureau)

Thousands in state still without power from Gustav remnants By Jason Wiest LITTLE ROCK - More than 60,000 Entergy Arkansas customers remained without power Wednesday in the wake of Hurricane Gustav's windy and rainy remnants, company officials reported.

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Arkansas News Bureau (Arkansas News Bureau)

Beebe asks Pryor to take helm of state Democratic Party By Jason Wiest LITTLE ROCK - Gov. Mike Beebe has asked U.S. Sen. David Pryor to serve as head of the state Democratic Party, replacing Chairman Bill Gwatney, who was shot and killed in his office a party headquarters last month.

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Arkansas News Bureau (Arkansas News Bureau)

Defense seeks transfer of death row case to Court of Appeals By John Lyon LITTLE ROCK - The state's challenge of a judge's ruling barring the use of new execution procedures on a convicted killer should be transferred to the Arkansas Court of Appeals, federal public defenders argued Wednesday.

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Soul food the new flavor in East Oakland (Oakland Tribune)

Restaurant one of only a handful in city to offer Southern-style African-American cuisine

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Coffee Market Taking Hold (Times Record)

Like some secretive super villain in a spy story, Fort Smith slowly is amassing power through three local coffee businesses and quietly establishing a presence in the global marketplace.

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