
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Eva Henderson, affectionately known by thousands as “Granny,” lived 87 years on the Buffalo River but was removed from her farm in 1972 by the government. She was one of about 2,000 displaced when the Buffalo became a National River. Her great-grandson Randy Gibbins remembers and is concerned it could soon happen to others, too. A visit with Gibbins completes AgriCulture’s 5-part series on the past and future of the Buffalo River.
By Arkansas Farm Bureau Federation5
2222 ratings
Eva Henderson, affectionately known by thousands as “Granny,” lived 87 years on the Buffalo River but was removed from her farm in 1972 by the government. She was one of about 2,000 displaced when the Buffalo became a National River. Her great-grandson Randy Gibbins remembers and is concerned it could soon happen to others, too. A visit with Gibbins completes AgriCulture’s 5-part series on the past and future of the Buffalo River.

127 Listeners

13 Listeners

9,634 Listeners

342 Listeners

7,448 Listeners

573 Listeners