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Interesting Facts Part of the land acquired in the Louisiana Purchase, Arkansas became a separate territory in 1819 and achieved statehood in 1836. A slave state, Arkansas became the ninth state to secede from the union and join the Confederate States of America.
The territory continued to grow and on June 15, 1836 it was admitted into the Union as the 25th state. When Arkansas became a state it was admitted as a slave state. Slave states were states where slavery was legal. When the Civil War began in 1861, around 25% of the people living in Arkansas were slaves.
They had a thriving culture along the Mississippi and Arkansas rivers as far back as 500 A.D. In the 16th and 17th centuries, both the Spanish and the French explored the region. The United States acquired the land from France as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.
THE STATE NAME: Arkansas is another form of Kansas and first appeared on a 1673 map of the region. The Kansas Indian tribe is a member of the Sioux nation. The Quapaw Indians lived west of the Mississippi River and north of the Arkansas River.
T.), was an organized incorporated territory of the United States that existed from March 2, 1819, to June 15, 1836, when the final extent of Arkansas Territory was admitted to the Union as the State of Arkansas. Robert Crittenden was the Secretary until 1829 and the de facto Governor, preparing Arkansas for statehood.
The name Arkansas was used by the early French explorers to refer to the Quapaw people—a prominent indigenous group in the area—and to the river along which they settled. The term was likely a corruption of akansea, the word applied to the Quapaw by another local indigenous community, the Illinois.