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Amity
City
CountryUnited States
StateArkansas
Clark
面积
 • 总计8.5 平方公里(3.3 平方英里)
 • 陸地8.5 平方公里(3.3 平方英里)
 • 水域0 平方公里(0 平方英里)
海拔156 公尺(512 英尺)
人口(2000)
 • 總計762人
 • 密度89.6人/平方公里(230.9人/平方英里)
时区Central (CST)UTC-6
 • 夏时制CDT(UTC-5
邮政编码71920-71921
電話區號501
FIPS code05-01360
GNIS feature ID0070440

Amity is a city in Clark County, Arkansas, United States. The population was 762 at the 2000 census. The city began on the Caddo River in the mid-19th century when William F. Browning and others, including Dr. A.B. Clingman at various times moved to the area.[來源請求]

History[编辑]

Amity was founded in 1847 by several pioneer families from the Mount Bethel area of Clark County under the leadership of William F. Browning, who served as the Clark County surveyor during the years of 1846 until his death in 1854. The group settled along the Caddo River, drawn to the area by an abundance of rich bottomland and fresh water. Browning constructed a two story log house just west of Caney Creek, which soon became the center of the expanding community. It was Browning who gave Amity its name.

Together with other citizens, Browning formed the Caddo Valley Baptist Church of Christ, which before several other names would later develop into the Bethel Missionary Baptist Church in Glenwood and First Baptist Church in Amity. It is thought to be the first religious organization in the area, though Dr. A.B. Clingman, a physican and minister associated with the Church of Christ was in the area before Browning's group arrived. Browning's group built a large log house that would serve as both the church and the school house. The first school teacher was Captain Robert S. Burke, a former military officer and Browning's brother-in-law. A few months later, the first Amity Post Office was established nearby.

With the outbreak of the American Civil War, the community saw dark times. Initially in support of the Confederacy, soon the community became divided, with the men of Amity leaving to fight in both the Confederate Army and the Union Army. In several cases, families were split by their loyalties, causing turmoil within the small community. Midway through the war, Union soldiers burned the Burke schoolhouse and the Browning cotton press.

Following the war's end, the center of the community shifted to the south side of the Caddo River, first settled by John Hays Allen and Dr. Amariah Biggs. Dr. Biggs was widely known as a physician and Methodist minister, and first settled in the area around 1850. The Amity Post Office was soon after relocated to this area. In 1870, retired army Colonel Philander Curtis, a Connecticut native, settled in the area. Curtis built the first house where the town of Amity now stands, and served for several years as the towns postmaster. In 1871, Col. Curtis, and businessmen Riley Thompson and Jacob H. Lightsey purchased property from John Hays Allen, and on that property they laid out plans for the town, centering around a public square. By 1874 Amity had become a thriving village, with several new businesses and churches. In 1877 an adjacent area became "Amity Township", and in 1880 the town made a move to become incorporated, but it did not come to pass until 1907.

In the late 1870s a new schoolhouse was built. Its first teacher was Richard Melancthon Burke, son of Captain Robert Burke. The residents also formed the Amity Male and Female Academy, which eventually became Amity High School. Richard Burke died in 1883, and the school struggled until 1888, when Samual M. Samson arrived in Amity. Samson spent the next twenty years as the head of the high school, which at that time was a private school. After his departure, it was absorbed into the Amity Public School System.

In 1887, a false rumor that gold had been discovered in an area then known as the Trap Mountains resulted in a brief gold rush, which ended when the rumor proved false. Shortly after 1900, the Gurdon and Fort Smith Railroad was constructed through Amity, greatly improving the economy of the town. Soon, the logging industry began to thrive, with large sawmills opening in Rosboro and Glenwood. Amity became a main shipping and trade center for the area, and in 1905 the Bank of Amity opened, which now is on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1899 the town's first newspaper, the Amity Enterprise, went into circulation, followed by the Four-County Courier in 1915 and the Amity Owl in 1922. Just before World War II, the shortage of cinnabar caused a brief but productive mining industry in the nearby mountains south of the town, a phenomenon which became known as the Quicksilver Rush. However, any significant mining had ended by 1940, and following the war and an increased worldwide supply, the mines closed.

Recent history[编辑]

With the Bean Lumber Company opening in 1940, followed by the Barksdale Lumber Company, logging soon became the main source of employment for the town. At its peak, the Bean Lumber Company was producing more than 150 million board feet of pine lumber and 120 million board feet of treated lumber annually, making it one of the largest distributors of southern pine in the United States. The Bean Lumber Company would later open mills in Glenwood, and in Buckner, Missouri.[1]

A.J. Hunter, who had originally came to town in 1905 to manage the city's first telephone exchange and who would later, upon the closure of the city's newspaper, begin The Owl, sold the paper in the 1940s to Marvin C. Bass of Little Rock. The paper then operated until the mid-1950s and closed, though no one remembers when or why it closed.

By 2007 Bean Lumber was struggling financially, and was under investigation for financial matters. The Amity mill closed, though the planer and treatment plants remained open. The Glenwood mill, which employed many Amity residents, closed and did not reopen until 2008. All of these events thoroughly affected the local economy, diminishing employment opportunities in the community, as well as briefly diminishing the population of the town, with many people being forced to search for work elsewhere.

In 1995 the Amity Public Schools merged with Glenwood to create Centerpoint High School, located midway between the two towns in Rosboro, Arkansas, in Pike County, Arkansas. The private Ouachita Hills Academy, associated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, is still located near Amity on the Clark-Pike County line and Word of Faith Christian Academy is located outside of town between Amity and Alpine.

In 1996, Arkadelphia native Joe May came to Amity and founded the city's fourth newspaper, The Standard. Its first date of publication was February 1, 1996. The paper is a weekly and covers Clark and Pike Counties as well as the Bismarck area. May, who is also an evangelist for churches of Christ, also ownes a folk history magazine published quarterly known as the Old Time Chronicle.

In 2007, the city observed its 100th anniversary of incorporation with a two-day festival on the square. In 2008, the city's businesspeople formed a Chamber of Commerce.[來源請求]

Notable persons associated with Amity[编辑]

Buck, Dr. Ron M., D.Min. - Senior Minister at Lindenwood Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Memphis, TN. Dr. Buck was raised from childhood in Amity and attended the local public schools. He has served churches in Arkansas, Tennessee, and Kentucky.

Diffee, Agnes White - Noted Nazarene pastor, evangelist, and radio speaker. A native of Arkansas, Pastor Diffee was ordained in the Church of the Nazarene in 1919. Her first full-time ministerial work was as pastor of the Amity (Arkansas) church, where a new stone church was built and paid for under her leadership. She went on to become nationally famous for her work. (See: http://www.whwomenclergy.org/booklets/cloud_of_witnesses.php)

Franks, Dr. George R., Jr., Ph.D. - Past Grand Master of Masons in Arkansas (2004).He received the Scottish Rite 33rd Degree and many other forms of Masonic recognition. Dr. Franks was raised from childhood in Amity and attended the local public schools. He was made a Mason in the local lodge, Sulphur Springs #100, in 1978.

Holloway, Rufus Emory - A noted writer, his Whitman: An Interpretation in Narrative was the first biography of a major literary figure to win a Pulitzer Prize (1926). Mr. Holloway, a native of Missouri and graduate of Hendrix College, taught English for two years at Amity High School.(See: http://www.bookrags.com/biography/rufus-emory-holloway-dlb/)

Rowe, Truett E. - FBI Special Agent killed in the line of duty on June 1, 1937, during an altercation with one Guy Osborne. Rowe was born in Amity in 1904 and educated in the local schools. He joined the FBI in 1935. (See: http://www.fbi.gov/libref/hallhonor/rowe.htm)

Teague, Bertha Frank - Noted high school basketball coach and member of the Oklahoma Girls Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame; Oklahoma State University Alumni Association Hall of Fame; Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame; and Missouri Basketball Hall of Fame. Born in Missouri, she attended the local public schools and graduated from Amity High School in 1924, before attending Oklahoma State University. (See: http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/T/TE002.html)

Geography[编辑]

Amity is located at 34°15′58″N 93°27′51″W / 34.26611°N 93.46417°W / 34.26611; -93.46417 (34.266246, -93.464093).[2]

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 3.3平方英里(8.5平方公里), all of it land.

人口[编辑]

As of the census[3] of 2000, there were 762 people, 305 households, and 208 families residing in the city. The population density was 231.9 people per square mile (89.4/km²). There were 361 housing units at an average density of 109.9/sq mi (42.4/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 96.85% White, 0.92% Black or African American, 0.79% Native American, 0.92% from other races, and 0.52% from two or more races. 2.49% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

305个住户中的34.4%有18岁以下的儿童、56.1%是夫妇同居、9.5%是单亲母亲家庭,另有31.5%未形成家庭。 27.5%的住户仅有一人,其中13.8%是65岁以上的独居老人。平均每个住户有2.50人、每个家庭有3.07人。

In the city the population was spread out with 27.3% under the age of 18, 9.6% from 18 to 24, 26.9% from 25 to 44, 21.4% from 45 to 64, and 14.8% who were 65 years of age or older. 人口年龄的中位数为33。平均每100名女性对应96.4名男性,18岁以上的人口中每100名女性对应89.7名男性。

The median income for a household in the city was $25,625, and the median income for a family was $32,188. 男性和女性的个人年收入中位数分别$22,330和$16,250。 The per capita income for the city was $13,626. About 10.0% of families and 14.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 17.8% of those under age 18 and 17.9% of those age 65 or over.

Education[编辑]

Amity Public Schools belong to the Centerpoint School District. The four schools in the district are Centerpoint Primary School, Centerpoint Intermediate School, Centerpoint Middle School and Centerpoint High School.

Anne Butcher is the Superintendent of Schools.[4]

参考资料[编辑]

  1. ^ Pike County. The Encyclopedia of Arkansas. [2009-11-23]. 
  2. ^ US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990. United States Census Bureau. 2011-02-12 [2011-04-23]. 
  3. ^ American FactFinder. United States Census Bureau. [2008-01-31]. 
  4. ^ Centerpoint School District. Centerpoint School District. [2012-19-06]. 

外部链接[编辑]

Template:Clark County, Arkansas zh:阿米蒂 (阿肯色州)