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Topic: Tulip, Arkansas


  
  3rdcoi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Private—Enlisted in Co. I, 3rd Arkansas Infantry, at Tulip, Arkansas, June 25, 1861; discharged for disability, November 27, 1861; born in Tennessee, c1840.
Private—Enlisted in Co. I, 3rd Arkansas Infantry, at Tulip, Arkansas, June 25, 1861; discharged for diarrhea and bronchitis at Staunton, Virginia, August 22, 1861, and died shortly thereafter; buried in Thornrose Cemetery at Staunton; born in Tennessee, c1842; listed in Dallas county 1860 census; occupation farmer.
Private—Enlisted in Co. I, 3rd Arkansas Infantry, at Tulip, Arkansas, June 25, 1861; appointed musician, July 10, 1861; discharged for disability at Goldsboro, North Carolina, January 25, 1863; born in Chenango county, New York; occupation bricklayer.
www.couchgenweb.com /civilwar/3rdcoi.html   (3951 words)

  
 Designing A Future For Arkansas Wildlife
It is characteristically veneered with windblown silt deposits (loess) and underlain by erosion-prone, unconsolidated coastal plain sediments; loess is thicker than in the Southeastern Plains (65).
They are related to the beech–maple cove forests of the Appalachian Mountains; like the Appalachian cove forests, tulip poplar dominates early successional communities, at least in the southern ridge.
In Arkansas, tulip poplar is native only to the Bluff Hills (74a).
www.wildlifearkansas.com /ridge.html   (376 words)

  
 2barcavs
Company C—Dallas County Troop, organized at Tulip, Arkansas, March 1, 1862.
This Battalion is near the encampment of Col. Fagan’s Arkansas Regiment of your Corps and Gibson’s Brigade.
In 1864, the regiment was transferred to the Trans-Mississippi Army and fought in Arkansas, Missouri and Kansas.
www.couchgenweb.com /civilwar/2batcavs.html   (561 words)

  
 Univ. of Arkansas, Fayetteville: BUTLER-PAISLEY FAMILY PAPERS
Emma Butler Paisley (1844-1887) was the daughter of Tulip, Arkansas, farmer and merchant Alexander Butler (1807-1881), and wife of William McLean Paisley (1842-1891), also a farmer and merchant.
The correspondence pertains primarily to family matters in Tulip and elsewhere, religious concerns, business and other travel, the Civil War, emigration to California and Texas, and business matters.
The letters touch on national events (the Civil War, the Centennial of the United States), family matters, religious concerns (many of the Butlers and Paisleys were clergymen), and travel (for business, to visit family, or as part of the general move westward).
libinfo.uark.edu /specialcollections/findingaids/butlerpaisley.html   (1177 words)

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