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Office vacant from March 14, 1871 - January 6, 1873: Office vacated by resignation: Ozra Amander Hadley: 3 Volney V. Smith (1841–1897) January 6, 1873 – November 12, 1874 (office abolished) Republican [1] 1872: Elisha Baxter: Office did not exist from November 12, 1874, to January 11, 1927; 4 Harvey Parnell (1880–1936) January 11, 1927 ...
Senator Years Class State Party Lifespan Joseph Carter Abbott: 1868–1871: 2: North Carolina: Republican: 1825–1881 James Abdnor: 1981–1987: 3: South Dakota: Republican
New York City Department of Education (not BOCES) 907,595 Bronx Kings New York Queens Richmond: New York City New York City New York City New York Mills Union Free School District #4 517 Oneida: Oneida-Herkimer-Madison BOCES: Mohawk RIC Central Region Newark Central School District #1 1,949 Wayne: Ontario-Seneca-Yates-Cayuga-Wayne (Wayne-Finger ...
The 1982 Arkansas gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 1982. Former Democratic governor Bill Clinton regained the position after having narrowly been ...
It is a source of hydropower, and helps regulate river traffic on the Arkansas River. In 2013 it had an operating budget just over 8.9 million dollars. [11] During the 2019 Arkansas River floods, a levee just south of Dardanelle near Holla Bend failed and broke at 1 a.m. Friday, May 31. Over the next few days water came perilously close to ...
There are a number of states that have more than one university system, e.g. California with 2; Colorado with 2; Indiana with 2; New York with 2; Tennessee with 2; and Texas with 7 (the most). This article is part of a series on
The 2018 Arkansas gubernatorial election was held on November 6, 2018, to elect the governor of Arkansas, concurrently with elections to the United States Senate in other states, elections to the United States House of Representatives, and various state and local elections.
The most widely accepted estimates of unemployment rates for the Great Depression are those by Stanley Lebergott from the 1950s. He estimated that unemployment reached 24.9 percent in the worst days of 1933. Another commonly cited estimate is by Michael Darby in 1976. He put the unemployment rate at a peak of 22.5 percent in 1932. [21]