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A Mistaken Issue - The Four-Mile Law!: How the Jonesboro Missionary Baptist Association Began

Autor Richard L. Hartness Sr
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 sep 2023

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9798889551485
Pagini: 130
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Editura: Neil Investments Inc

Notă biografică

Richard L. Hartness, Sr., a Wynne, Arkansas native, is a three-time graduate of Arkansas State University in Jonesboro (BS-68, MA-78, MA-14). While pursuing a career in supply chain management, he served as president of both the Northeast and Central Arkansas Purchasing Management Associations. Simultaneously, he pursued his passion for local history. He is the charter president of both the Cross County and Mississippi County Historical Societies, and has had memberships in the St. Francis, Poinsett, and Faulkner County historical societies, as well. He enjoys public speaking, historical research, and writing. He has had articles published in A History of the Jonesboro Association of Missionary Baptist Churches; On Point: The Journal of Army History; and various newspaper, county historical journals, booklets, and anthologies. His local history books can be found on www.Hartnesspublications.com. In 2012, the Cross County Chamber of Commerce named him their Distinguished Citizen of the Year. He was an adjunct professor of history for East Arkansas Community College for nearly a decade. He serves on the board of the Friends of the Arkansas State Archives, Arkansas Delta Byways, the A-State Alumni Association, and historian for the Jonesboro Association of Missionary Baptist Churches. He is a former president of the NE AR Chapter of the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA), and currently serves as the first vice-president of the Arkansas Council of MOAA Chapters. At his alma mater, he serves as the commander of the A-State ROTC Alumni Bn., where he received his Army commission (during the Viet Nam era) in August 1967 and an Army Commendation Medal in 1968, during active duty in Germany. Hartness credits his maternal grandmother for sparking his interests in local family stories and Arkansas history topics, including stories about a bygone steamboat riverport, a Confederate Arkansas county, the first Black professors at A-State, a lifelong search for his biological father, and the biography of a U.S. Army Major General. Recently, he ghost-wrote a memoir for a well known elderly widow of Wynne, Arkansas. Hartness and his wife, Herberta, live in Jonesboro, Arkansas, where their children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren keep them involved in the here and now.