Arkansas's 1st congressional district

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arkansas's 1st congressional district
Area 17,521 mi² (45,379 km²)
Distribution 44.5% urban, 55.5% rural
Population (2000) 668,360
Median income $28,940
Ethnic composition 80.2% White, 16.6% Black, 0.3% Asian, 1.9% Hispanic, 0.4% Native American, 0.9% other
Occupation 35% blue collar, 48.8% white collar, 16.2% gray collar
Cook PVI D + 1

Arkansas's First Congressional District is a U.S. congressional district in Arkansas, which elects a representative to the United States House of Representatives. It encompasses the counties of Baxter, Fulton, Sharp, Randolph, Clay, Izard, Lawrence, Greene, Searcy, Stone, Cleburne, Independence, Craighead, Jackson, Poinsett, Mississippi, Cross, Woodruff, Saint Francis, Lee, Phillips, Monroe, Arkansas, Prairie, Crittenden, and Lonoke.

It is currently represented by Democrat Marion Berry.

[edit] Character

The Mississippi Delta has long been home to American industrial agriculture, with cotton, rice and soybeans by far the biggest export from the region. The 1st District, covers most of the Arkansas Delta area, stretching as far west to the Ozarks. The farming areas, despite their fertility, are generally poor by national standards, with unemployment and undereducation as some of the greatest problems. Rice farms are the amongst the greatest recipients of federal farming subsidization - and three of the top five subsidy farms in the United States are in the first district, receiving over $100 million since 1996. The district is also notable for its large population of ducks.

Some manufacturing has been sited in the region recently, with several auto parts factories being built in Marion, and Toyota considering it as the site for its seventh North American plant.

Jonesboro is the largest town, being home to a sizable food processing industry, with companies such as Nestle and Frito-Lay sited here. Whilst Jonesboro itself sports a Republican trend, along with some of the hill counties, it is balanced by the strong Democratic presence in the black-dominated Delta. The result is a fairly closely divided vote in national politics - 50%-48% for Al Gore in 2000 but 52%-47% for George W. Bush in 2004.


Party and Year Representative
1997 - present Marion Berry
1993 - 1997 Blanche Lincoln
1969 - 1993 Bill Alexander, Jr.
1939 - 1969 Ezekiel C. Gathings
1921 - 1939 William J. Driver
1913 - 1921 Thaddeus H. Caraway
1903 - 1913 Robert B. Macon
1893 - 1903 Philip D. McCulloch, Jr.
1891 - 1893 William Henderson Cate
1889 - 1891 Lewis Porter Featherstone
1889 William Henderson Cate
1879 - 1889 Poindexter Dunn
1875 - 1879 Lucien Coatsworth Gause
1873 - 1875 Asa Hodges
1871 - 1873 James Millander Hanks
1867 - 1871 Logan Holt Roots
1861 - 1867 Civil War
1859 - 1861 Thomas Carmichael Hindman
1853 - 1859 Alfred Burton Greenwood
1847 - 1853 Robert Ward Johnson
1845 - 1847 Thomas Willoughby Newton
1845 Archibald Yell
1839 - 1845 Edward Cross
1835 - 1839 Archibald Yell