In 1857, twenty-one years after Arkansas gained statehood, the Arkansas legislature approved funding for the first geological survey of the state. Governor Elias N. Conway commissioned Dr. David Dale Owen to lead the survey beginning in 1857 to 1859 with funds of $4,800 per year, plus a salary of $1,800, and continuing from 1859 to 1860 with $6,000 per year, plus $2,500 salary. Owen was no stranger to government surveys; he also served as the State Geologist of Indiana (1837-1838) and Kentucky (1854-1857), as well as a geologist for the U.S. Government on a survey of Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and parts of Illinois and Nebraska (1839-1840, 1847-1850).
Owen commenced the Arkansas survey in Greene County with laboratory and field assistance of William Elderhorst – professor of chemistry and mineralogy at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Edward T. Cox – who later would be State Geologist of Indiana, Robert Peter – chemistry professor at Transylvania University, and Charles Léo Lesquereux – paleobotanist. Owen published his first report, “First Report of a Geological Reconnaissance of the Northern Counties of Arkansas,” in 1858 and followed it with “Second Report of a Geological Reconnaissance of the Middle and Southern Counties of Arkansas” in 1860. The second report was completed three days before he succumbed to illness onset from his survey in Arkansas on November 13, 1860.
Not only was David Dale Owen a geologist, but he was also an artist who illustrated the Arkansas landscape while on his survey. In both of his Arkansas reports, he included several illustrations – many in color – highlighting interesting features and scenery of Arkansas in the late 1850s:
For further reading:
Owen, David Dale, 1858, First report of a geological reconnaissance of the northern counties of Arkansas: Little Rock, Johnson & Yerkes, 287 p. (PDF link)
Owen, David Dale, 1860, Second report of a geological reconnaissance of the middle and southern counties of Arkansas: Philadelphia, C. Sherman & Son, 230 p. (PDF link)