Miss America's Outstanding Teen State Pageants - Arkansas

Arkansas

Year Name Hometown Age Local title Placement at MAO Teen Special scholarships at MAO Teen Notes
2012 Laura Leigh Turner Little Rock 15 Miss Diamond Lakes Outstanding Teen 2nd Runner Up Preliminary Talent
2011 Ashton Campbell Hindsville 17 Miss South Arkansas’ Outstanding Teen Miss Photogenic
2010 Mackenzie Bryant Conway 17 Miss Petit Jean Valley’s Outstanding Teen
2009 Savvy Shields Fayetteville 13 Heart of the Ozarks Outstanding Teen
2008 Sloane Roberts Rison 15 White River's Outstanding Teen 2nd runner up Talent Preliminary, Evening Gown Preliminary 4th RU Miss Arkansas 2011, later Miss Arkansas 2012
2007 Morgan Holt Conway 16 Miss Conway's Outstanding Teen
2006 Dorothy Shepherd Pine Bluff 17 Miss South Arkansas' Outstanding Teen 4th runner-up Evening Gown preliminary, Sportswear Preliminary Top 15 Miss Arkansas 2011.
2005 Hannah Joiner Maumelle 17 Miss Greater Little Rock's Outstanding Teen Top 10 Sportswear Preliminary, Evening Gown preliminary
2004 Alyse Eady Fort Smith Miss Teen Arkansas Valley No national pageant Later Miss Arkansas 2010, 1st runner up to Miss America 2011
2003 Lindsey Wright Greenwood Miss Teen Texarkana No national pageant
2002 Kara Luttrell El Dorado Miss Teen South Arkansas No national pageant
2001 Chanley Painter Conway Miss Teen Conway No national pageant Later Miss Arkansas USA 2009
2000 Amber Bennett Carlisle Miss Teen White River No national pageant Later Miss Arkansas 2006
1999 Julie Rees Jonesboro Miss Teen Delta No national pageant
1998 Emily Wade Foreman Miss Teen Texarkana No national pageant
1997 Jenna Williams El Dorado Miss Teen Arkansas Valley No national pageant

Read more about this topic:  Miss America's Outstanding Teen State Pageants

Famous quotes containing the word arkansas:

    The man who would change the name of Arkansas is the original, iron-jawed, brass-mouthed, copper-bellied corpse-maker from the wilds of the Ozarks! He is the man they call Sudden Death and General Desolation! Sired by a hurricane, dam’d by an earthquake, half-brother to the cholera, nearly related to the smallpox on his mother’s side!
    —Administration in the State of Arka, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    ...I am who I am because I’m a black female.... When I was health director in Arkansas ... I could talk about teen-age pregnancy, about poverty, ignorance and enslavement and how the white power structure had imposed it—only because I was a black female. I mean, black people would have eaten up a white male who said what I did.
    Joycelyn Elders (b. 1933)