ALBERT PIKE, AR (KSLA) - Campgrounds at the Albert Pike recreation area reopened for day use Thursday morning. The U.S. Forestry Commission closed the campgrounds after 20 people drowned in a flash ...
D.C.'s last remaining outdoor Confederate statue, torn down by protesters on Juneteenth in 2020, will be restored and reinstalled, according to an announcement from the National Park Service Monday.
WASHINGTON -- An Arkansas congressman is working to reopen overnight camping at Albert Pike Recreation Area. On Thursday, Republican U.S. Rep. Bruce Westerman introduced the Ouachita National Forest ...
A bronze statue of a Confederate general that was toppled by protesters five years ago will be restored and reinstalled in Washington, D.C., the National Park Service said. The restoration of the ...
The National Park Service (NPS) announced on Monday that a controversial Confederate statue, which was toppled during the social justice protests following the murder of George Floyd in June 2020, ...
Arkansas Congressman Bruce Westerman filed a bill Thursday to reopen camping in the Albert Pike Recreation Area, where 20 people died in a flash flood in 2010. The U.S. Forest Service announced Dec.
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump criticized D.C. Mayor Murial Bowser during his campaign rally Saturday in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His criticism was targeted toward the Confederate General Albert Pike ...
A statue of a Confederate general that demonstrators toppled in Washington, D.C., in the aftermath of the police killing of George Floyd will be reinstalled. The bronze statue depicting Gen. Albert ...
WASHINGTON — D.C.'s only outdoor Confederate statue was torn down and burned by protesters on Juneteenth, right outside MPD headquarters. The statue, of Brigadier General Albert Pike, was one of 18 ...
WASHINGTON — When the statue of Confederate General Albert Pike fell to the ground late Friday evening, jubilant cheers rang out across Judiciary Square where the monument had stood tall for 100 years ...
ALBERT PIKE RECREATION AREA—There’s a certain spot on the banks of the Little Missouri River where the sun-dappled water is a shade of green that Janice Lowery McRae struggles to name. “Emerald, maybe ...