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  1. Orval Faubus was born on Jan. 7, 1910, in a two-room shack near Greasy Creek in the isolated and desperately poor hills of northwestern Arkansas. He was one of seven children of Sam Faubus, a farmer who worked the hillside soil to raise corn and light grain; Orval Faubus was reared in a world that owed little to the rhythms of the Deep South.

  2. Orval E. Faubus was born January 7, 1910, at the community of Greasy Creek in Madison County, Arkansas. He was certified as a teacher in 1928 and taught ten terms in rural, one-room schools. During summers her worked as an itinerant fruit picker, sawmill laborer, timber worker, and during 1937 and 1938, as a lumberjack in Washington.

  3. 25. Jan. 1993 · Orval Faubus was born in an Ozark log cabin in a county that didn't have a paved road. Madison County didn't get any "improved roads" till Orval himself was grown and had come back from the war ...

  4. 20. Juli 1997 · But Faubus, like those who followed his lead, had made a bargain with the devil; the mob's adulation has been followed by history's harsher verdict. Along with Strom Thurmond, Ross Barnett, George Wallace, Lester Maddox and dozens of lesser defenders of a dying order, Orval Faubus wanted to be remembered for the many small things he did right, but, as The New York Times editorialized after ...

  5. Orval Eugene Faubus wurde am 7. Jan. 1910 in Combs, Arkansas geboren. Er erhielt seine Schulbildung in seinem Heimatdorf in den sogenannten Hinterwäldern, die völlig von dem übrigen Land abgeschnitten waren. Von 1928-38 war er Volksschullehrer in ländlichen Dorfschulen und bildete sich gleichzeitig durch Selbstunterricht weiter. Außerdem war er in der Pfadfinderbewegung führend tätig ...

  6. Orval Faubus. Orval Faubus, the governor of Arkansas who used the National Guard to stop black children from attending the Little Rock Central High, was not brought up to be a racist.

  7. Filmed interview with Orval Faubus conducted for America, They Loved You Madly, a precursor to Eyes on the Prize. Discussion centers on the integration crisis at Little Rock's Central High School. The original interview elements, 16mm negative and 1/4" audio reel to reel, were preserved during 2010-2016 due to the generosity of a grant from the ...