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Arkansas’ culture and geography far more diverse than just Ozarks, Delta | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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Arkansas’ culture and geography far more diverse than just Ozarks, Delta | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette


From the ArkLaTex to the Ozarks, Arkansans have their regional identities.

But two regions — the Ozarks and Delta — seem to be more solidified in the Arkansas ethos.

Ben Johnson of El Dorado, a retired history professor from Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia, has a theory on why that is.

New Deal reforms in the 1930s brought more attention to the Ozarks and the Delta as Arkansas pondered its history and place in the wider world, said Johnson.

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And then there’s the music.

Folk music was becoming more popular in the 1930s and ’40s, said Johnson. Appalachia got most of the attention, but the Ozarks — being sort of an extension of Appalachian culture — also benefited.

“Basically, the Ozarks became a cultural product,” said Johnson. “The Arkansas identity really became tied, I think, to the Ozarks. When you think of Arkansas, you think of the hill people. That was part of the tourist branding, the promotional literature for the state after World War II and so forth. As part of that process, the Ozarks became sort of the cultural foundation of how people understand and see Arkansas.”

The Delta, of course, gave birth to the blues, and Helena became a magnet for blues musicians looking to get on the King Biscuit Time radio show and possibly make a deal with the devil.

“People in much of eastern Arkansas, once you get past those who identify with Central Arkansas, generally embrace the identity of being from the Delta. It suggests identity, heritage, a sense of place,” said Thomas Jacques, interim director of the Delta Cultural Center in downtown Helena-West Helena.

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So today, the Ozarks and the Delta are often-used identifiers.

But the Ouachitas and West Gulf Coastal Plain? Not so much.

“Southwest Arkansas or Gulf Coastal Plain is an identifiable region with distinctive historical and economic development but clearly does not have the cultural heft and recognition of the Ozarks and Delta,” said Johnson.

The Ozark Mountains are generally considered to be north of Interstate 40 on the western side of the state, as opposed to the Ouachita Mountains to the south. The Ozarks and Ouachitas are geologically different. The Ouachitas were caused by the collision of tectonic plates. The Ozarks are an eroded plateau that was shoved into an elevated position by that collision.

The Delta is a word often used to describe at least part of, if not all of, the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. To many, the word Delta conjures an image of the Deep South, of cotton fields and plantations.

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Arkansas’ geographic dvisions include, clockwise from upper left, the Ozark Mountains, the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, Crowley’s Ridge, the West Gulf Coastal Plain, the Ouachita Mountains and the Arkansas Valley. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette graphic)

COMPASS DIRECTIONS

While some people use physiographic identifiers, others use region names to explain where they’re from — like Northwest Arkansas or eastern Arkansas.

“I think the difference between a directional identity, like being from eastern Arkansas, and a geographic identity, like being from the Ozarks, is that there is a kind of regional culture to these different geographic regions,” said C.L. Bledsoe, a novelist and poet who grew up in Wynne and now lives in Virginia.

When Arkansans meet Arkansans, they very likely would introduce themselves and say what town they’re from.

But, as Johnson said, if they’re asked where that town is, the respondent would be likely to offer geographical markers.

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“My wife, who is a Union County native, commonly responds that El Dorado ‘is 15 miles north of the Louisiana line and in the middle of the bottom of the state,’” said Johnson.

Kenneth Bridges, a history professor at South Arkansas College in El Dorado, said Arkansans from cities or immediate suburbs will usually identify as being from those cities, or they’ll say Northwest Arkansas if they’re from Fayetteville, Springdale, Rogers or Bentonville.

“Directional or regional references will often be used if they are from smaller towns,” said Bridges. “Here in South Arkansas, we will often just say ‘South Arkansas,’ which generally indicates anything within 100 miles of the state line. Central Arkansas will generally refer to anything within an hour or 100 miles of Little Rock.”

Bridges said the Delta in Arkansas usually refers to the counties adjacent to the Mississippi River. That’s considerably less territory than the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, which stretches west almost to Little Rock and includes all or part of 27 Arkansas counties.

This might be why some people who live in subregions of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, such as the Grand Prairie, identify with the subregion instead of saying they’re from the Delta.

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“Even Union County is part of the Delta, technically, but no one here really thinks of it as part of the Delta,” said Bridges. “It’s usually just considered as a matter of proximity more than technical precision. We had a factory in World War II here that was called the Ozark Ordnance Works even though we are nowhere near the Ozarks. It’s really a matter of perspective.”

Bridges said the El Dorado-Magnolia-Camden area would sometimes refer to itself as the “Golden Triangle” area years ago.

“Sometimes here in south Arkansas, we will refer to ourselves as ‘LA,’ or ‘Lower Arkansas,’” he said. “Far southwest Arkansas will sometimes call itself the ‘ArkLaTex’ while far southeast Arkansas will sometimes call itself the ‘ArkLaMiss.’”

SUBREGIONS

Arkansas’ subregions can confound visitors.

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We have the Boston Mountains, which are nowhere near Massachusetts. The Boston Mountains are the southern portion of the Ozarks.

And there’s an unusual geographical formation in east Arkansas that seems, at least to some, to have an identity all its own.

Crowley’s Ridge rises some 250 feet above the Mississippi Alluvial Plain and stretches from southern Missouri south to Helena-West Helena, with a slight break at Marianna created by the L’Anguille River as it flowed across the ridge.

While some east Arkansas residents say they’re from the Delta, others say they’re from Crowley’s Ridge.

Still others, who live on Crowley’s Ridge, say they’re from both, arguing that Crowley’s Ridge is in the Delta.

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“I always said I grew up in the Delta,” said Charlie Hart, who grew up in Wynne and now lives in North Little Rock. “The ridge just cuts a swath through the Delta in my eyes.”

But Bledsoe, the writer from Wynne, claims the ridge as his home turf.

“Being from Wynne, I think of myself as from Crowley’s Ridge, but I grew up farming in the Delta,” he said. “For me, as a writer, where I’m from is important. Donald Harington famously wrote about the Ozarks through the lens of the summers he spent there as a child, I’ve read, but he was originally from Little Rock, which is very different.”

The landscape and history influences a writer, said Bledsoe.

“I’m a southern writer, but more than that I’m an Arkansas writer and I write about Crowley’s Ridge and the Delta,” he said. “Those places are home to me.”

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Edward C. Dodge, who teaches at Catholic High School for Boys in Little Rock, spent his younger years in Helena and Gosnell, near Blytheville, before going to college at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro.

“I always thought of Crowley’s Ridge as a feature within the Arkansas Delta,” he said. “I also suspect that more Arkansans know the Delta than Crowley’s Ridge. Combined, using the Delta to locate Wynne seems a stronger choice to me.”

Farther to the north, Paul McFadden, vice president of student affairs and associate professor of Biblical studies at Crowley’s Ridge College in Paragould, very much favors the ridge reference.

“Up this way, the ones that are here, we talk about the ridge a lot,” he said. “I’ve been working here for 41 years, and the ridge is all I know. Crowley’s Ridge is a big thing to me and the people who live here. Delta, I never use that term in describing my life or what I’ve been about. It’s always been the ridge.”

He was born in Wynne, raised at Hickory Ridge in Cross County and went to high school in Wheatley before moving to Paragould to attend Crowley’s Ridge College, where he graduated in 1983.

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“The ridge out here just feels different from the areas on each side of it, east and west,” he said.

Dodge said Delta may be a better identifier for the part of Arkansas in the general vicinity of Memphis.

“Living in Conway, when I hear of the Delta, I definitely think closer to Memphis,” he said. “And while I’m relying on childhood memories, I’d say the experience suggested there’s quite a difference between Jonesboro and Helena.”

“Some people in northeast Arkansas embrace the Crowley’s Ridge identity, but that’s not common once one gets down to Helena,” said Jacques. “You could probably figure geographically that once you cross Interstate 40 [heading south], there is very little hemming or hawing — you’re simply from the Arkansas Delta.”

GEOGRAPHICAL REVELATIONS

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Many people don’t realize they’re from a distinct, named geographical region until after they’ve moved away.

Joe David Rice, the former Arkansas tourism director, grew up in Jonesboro, which is on Crowley’s Ridge, but Rice didn’t know that when he was a kid.

“I don’t think I heard of Crowley’s Ridge until I moved to Little Rock and got a job with Parks and Tourism,” he said.

Rice said he knew Jonesboro was in the Delta because of the mosquitoes.

“That was sort of the defining cultural icon for people in the Delta,” he said.

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As more people move into Arkansas from out of state — particularly to rapidly growing Northwest Arkansas — the use of the regional, geographic identifiers within Arkansas will probably wane, he said.

Brooks Blevins, an expert on the Ozarks at Missouri State University who grew up in Izard County, Arkansas, said he was in college when he realized that he’d grown up in the Ozarks.

“We identified as hill people — especially in contrast to the people from the ‘bottoms,’ the flat-land people, of northeast Arkansas,” he said. “But we didn’t think about being from the Ozarks.

“When I thought of the Ozarks, I thought of Stone County because of the Ozark Folk Center State Park and Springfield, Mo., because we watched Springfield TV stations and they were always throwing the O-word around,” said Blevins.

“As a kid I was responding to the Ozarks as a ‘brand,’ not particularly as a place,” he said. “Today, though, 40 years later, I think the Ozarks as a brand name has expanded, and there are many more people — still not all, but more than there used to be — who have Ozarks somewhere near the top of their identity list. And I think it would be more unusual today for someone to grow up in the rural Ozarks, like I did, and not have some recognition of being in and a part of some place called the Ozarks.”

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But now, Blevins very much identifies as being from the Ozarks.

“Born and raised a hillbilly, but the Ozark identity, I guess you would say, was something learned or acquired in adulthood,” he said.

When traveling recently to states out west, Blevins said he told people he’s from Arkansas.

“I don’t know that I mentioned the Ozarks to anyone, probably because I wasn’t sure they would know where/what I was talking about,” he said.

“As for why Ozark and not Ouachita caught on,” Blevins said, “I don’t know for sure, but I suspect some of it has to do with the weird spelling of Ouachita and the inability of people to pronounce it, if you haven’t grown up with the word. Plus, the word Ozark has been in use for the Arkansas hill country longer than Ouachita has, and it’s probably just a more aesthetically pleasing and catchy word. And there hasn’t been a ton of stuff written about the Ouachitas specifically, in terms of history and culture.”

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Arkansas’ 2026 schedule unveiled

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Arkansas’ 2026 schedule unveiled



FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Arkansas will open the Ryan Silverfield era at home on Sept. 5 against North Alabama as part of a home schedule that features seven home games, including five Southeastern Conference games as part of the league’s first-ever, nine-game conference slate.

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The Razorbacks open the season inside Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium against North Alabama on Sept. 5. Coach Silverfield will coach his first game as the Head Hog in the program’s first-ever meeting with Lions. Another program first awaits the following week with a trip to Utah (Sept. 12) for the first football game between the two schools. The road game at Utah will be the Hogs’ third at a Big 12 opponent in five seasons following trips to BYU in 2022 and Oklahoma State in 2024.

Arkansas returns home to Fayetteville for back-to-back games with its first Southeastern Conference game of the season against Georgia on Sept. 19. The Bulldogs’ visit to Razorback Stadium will be the team’s first since 2020 when the two teams squared off in the season opener. Arkansas’ final non-conference game of the season is set for Sept. 26 vs. Tulsa. The matchup will be the 74th in a series that dates back to 1899.

A three-game stretch to start October features games at Texas A&M (Oct. 3) and at Vanderbilt (Oct. 17) with a home game against Tennessee (Oct. 10) in between. The trip to Texas A&M will be Arkansas’ first since 2020 and the trip to Vanderbilt will be the first for the Razorbacks since 2011 and mark just the 11th meeting all time between the two programs. Despite joining the SEC in 1992, the Hogs and the Commodores have played just seven times with only three coming in Nashville.

Arkansas’ bye week is set for Oct. 24 before wrapping up the month with a home game against Missouri (Oct. 31). The Battle Line Rivalry moves up the schedule from its traditional final game slot for the first time since Mizzou joined the league. The Razorbacks and Tigers have closed every regular season – except the pandemic-shortened schedule in 2020 – against each other since 2014.

November begins with a trip to Auburn (Nov. 7) before closing the season at home in two of the final three regular season games. South Carolina makes the trip to Fayetteville on Nov. 14 for the first time since 2022. A return trip to Texas (Nov. 21) serves as the final road game on the slate. The Battle for the Golden Boot returns to its regular season finale position on the schedule on Nov. 28. Arkansas and LSU battled on the final weekend of the regular season from 1992 when the Hogs joined the SEC through the 2013 season.

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Football season ticket renewals will take place from January 20 through March 31. New season tickets can be purchased by clicking here. All new season ticket purchasers will have the opportunity to relocate their season ticket locations during Razorback Seat Selection in April. Additional season ticket inventory will be made available following the seat selection process.

2026 Arkansas Football Schedule
Date – Opponent
Sept. 5 North Alabama
Sept. 12 at Utah
Sept. 19 Georgia*
Sept. 26 Tulsa
Oct. 3 at Texas A&M*
Oct. 10 Tennessee*
Oct. 17 at Vanderbilt*
Oct. 24 Bye
Oct. 31 Missouri*
Nov. 7 at Auburn*
Nov. 14 South Carolina*
Nov. 21 at Texas*
Nov. 28 LSU*
*Southeastern Conference game



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Arkansas Educational Television Commission disaffiliates from PBS | Arkansas Democrat Gazette

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Arkansas Educational Television Commission disaffiliates from PBS | Arkansas Democrat Gazette


Bill Bowden

bbowden@nwaonline.com

Bill Bowden covers a variety of news for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, primarily in Northwest Arkansas. He has worked at the newspaper for 16 years and previously worked for both the Arkansas Democrat and Arkansas Gazette.

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Artificial intelligence “explosion” has changed the accounting industry in Arkansas

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Artificial intelligence “explosion” has changed the accounting industry in Arkansas


Accounting firms in Arkansas are aggressively adopting artificial intelligence tools. The field is among the most impacted by the AI boom because it is so data-centered.

“All the accounting firms, you know, medium size to large firms that I’ve been talking to, they have incorporated AI to some extent,” said Dr. Gaurav Kumar, a professor of accounting at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

Artificial intelligence can do in an instant work that used to take accountants many hours.

Landmark CPAs is at the forefront of the industry’s shift to AI in Arkansas and says the technology has all but eliminated the need for entry-level accountants to punch in numbers for W-2s and 1099s.

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“Being able to use software that can auto-populate, can read documents and populate that into the return for us has really made a big difference,” said Rocky Goodman, a tax partner at Landmark.

And it’s the same with audits—AI can look for discrepancies and verify cash payments at lightning speed.

“It’s going to do it like that, whereas it used to take a staff maybe five to 10 hours,” said Michael Pierce, a Landmark audit partner.

And contrary to fears, Landmark says AI isn’t costing accountants jobs but plugging a gap created by a workforce shortage in the industry.

The advantages of AI are clear, but it also demands investment in cybersecurity and ensuring data privacy.

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“One of the concerns is privacy. So, you know, if the staff is using personal AI tools, client data could be exposed. So firms must provide kind of secure, enterprise-grade AI options and clear policies,” Kumar told KATV.

Landmark plays it safe and uses enterprise-level AI tools.

“Our IT department obviously spends a lot of time researching to ensure that we don’t have any issues with client information being included in the learning modules that are building out these AIs,” Pierce told KATV.

Another concern is that, despite its rapid growth, AI is not infallible.

“AI can still produce incorrect or sometimes made-up information it can automate tasks, but it cannot replace judgment, ethics, or the ability to interpret complex tax laws or business scenarios,” Kumar said. “So, you know, that’s where a professional CPA, professional accountants, come in—review is essential.”

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For that reason, and because data input is no longer a burden, Landmark is hiring CPAs for more of an analytical role.

“It does take a different skill set for someone than it did prior to the AI explosion,” Goodman told KATV.

But AI is reshaping the accounting industry in other ways as well.

“It’s also another challenge because AI is reducing the number of hours it takes to do a work, and traditionally accounting firms have always billed their clients on an hourly basis. So now AI is kind of pressuring firms to shift away from hourly billing and move more towards value pricing and subscription based advisory. So it’s kind of like they have to change their whole model,” Kumar told KATV.

Another factor is the cost of AI—like other firms, Landmark has had to spend a lot of money to stay competitive in its rapidly changing industry.

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There is immense pressure to adopt AI, and it’s not limited to accounting firms.

“I’ve been seeing that companies in Central Arkansas are eager to move forward, but they’re trying to do it judiciously,” said Marla Johnson, tech entrepreneur-in-residence at UALR.



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