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Cedar Township, Carroll County, Arkansas

Northwest Arkansas geography stubsTownships in ArkansasTownships in Carroll County, ArkansasUse mdy dates from July 2023

Cedar Township is one of twenty-one current townships in Carroll County, Arkansas, USA. As of the 2010 census, its total population was 3,575.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cedar Township, Carroll County, Arkansas (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Cedar Township, Carroll County, Arkansas

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Latitude Longitude
N 36.404188888889 ° E -93.784427777778 °
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72632
Arkansas, United States
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Eureka Springs, Arkansas
Eureka Springs, Arkansas

Eureka Springs is a city in Carroll County, Arkansas, United States, and one of two county seats for the county. It is located in the Ozark Mountains of northwest Arkansas, near the border with Missouri. As of the 2020 census, the city population was 2,166.In 1970 the entire city, as of its borders at that time, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Eureka Springs Historic District. Eureka Springs has been selected as one of America's Distinctive Destinations by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Eureka Springs was originally called "The Magic City", "Little Switzerland of the Ozarks", and later the "Stairstep Town" because of its mountainous terrain and the winding, up-and-down paths of its streets and walkways. It is a tourist destination for its unique character as a Victorian resort, which first attracted visitors to use its then believed healing springs. The city has steep winding streets filled with Victorian-style cottages and manors. The historic commercial downtown of the city has an extensive streetscape of well-preserved Victorian buildings. The buildings are primarily constructed of local stone, built along limestone streets that curve around the hills, and rise and fall with the topography in a five-mile long loop. Some buildings have street-level entrances on more than one floor and other such oddities: the Basin Park Hotel has its front entrances on the floor below first, and a ground-level emergency exit in the back of the building on the fifth floor. The streets wind around the town, with few intersecting at right angles. There are no traffic lights.

The Anglican Digest

The Anglican Digest (sometimes called TAD) is a quarterly religious magazine in the United States providing information related to Anglicanism, including news, essays, book reviews, and devotional material. It is published by SPEAK, the Society for Promoting and Encouraging Arts and Knowledge (of the Church), which was founded as the Episcopal Book Club in 1953 by Howard Lane Foland, a priest of The Episcopal Church in Nevada, Missouri. Since 1960, it has been based on a former dairy farm in the Ozarks called Hillspeak near Eureka Springs, Arkansas.The Anglican Digest affirms a "Prayer Book Catholic" heritage but says it serves "all expressions of Anglicanism: Anglo-Catholic, Broad, and Evangelical." When it began in 1958, it described itself as "A quarterly miscellany reflecting the words and work of the Churches of the Anglican Communion: some things old many things new most things borrowed everything true."James B. Simpson became executive director after its founder retired in 1980. At that time, it reported a paid circulation of over 100,000 worldwide. By 1989, subscriptions had increased to almost 250,000 with six issues per year. However, in 2012 it reported 45,000 readers. As of 2022, TAD had not published a public statement of circulation in at least six years. Edward L. Salmon, Jr. chaired the publication's board for 41 years. After his death, his daughter, Catherine S. Salmon, and Tony Clavier served as an editorial committee. In 2020, Fred Robinson became editor.