Little Dixie Sales Tax Calculator For 2022
Below you can find the general sales tax calculator for Little Dixie city for the year 2022. This is a custom and easy to use sales tax calculator made by non other than 360 Taxes.
How to use Little Dixie Sales Tax Calculator?
- Enter your “Amount” in the respected text field
- Choose the “Sales Tax Rate” from the drop-down list. (Check your city tax rate from here)
- Thats it, you can now get the tax amount as well as the final amount (which includes the tax too)
Method to calculate Little Dixie sales tax in 2022
As we all know, there are different sales tax rates from state to city to your area, and everything combined is the required tax rate.
The Arkansas sales tax rate is 6.5%, the sales tax rates in cities may differ from 6.5% to 11.375%. The average sales tax rate in Arkansas is 8.551%
The Sales tax rates may differ depending on the type of purchase. Usually it includes rentals, lodging, consumer purchases, sales, etc
For more information, please have a look at Arkansa’s Official Site
More About Little Dixie
Little Dixie is a historic 13- to 17-county region along the Missouri River in central Missouri, United States. Its early European-American settlers were largely migrants from the hemp and tobacco districts of Virginia, and central Kentucky and Tennessee. They brought enslaved African Americans with them or purchased them as workers in the region. Because Southerners settled there first, the pre-Civil War culture of the region was similar to that of the Upper South. The area was also known as Boonslick country.
A 1948 article in the Missouri Historical Review defined the antebellum “Little Dixie” region as a 13-county area between the Mississippi River north of Saint Louis to Missouri River counties in the central part of the state (sections of Audrain, Boone, Callaway, Chariton, Howard, Lincoln, Pike, Marion, Monroe, Ralls, Randolph, Saline, and Shelby counties), as indicated on the map linked via this footnote. This issue also contains other factual data about this region.
When the Southerners migrated to Missouri, they brought their cultural, social, agricultural, architectural, political and economic practices, including slavery. Overall, Missouri’s slave population represented 10 percent of the state’s population in the 1860 U.S. Census. But in Little Dixie, county and township slave populations ranged from 20 to 50 percent by 1860, with the highest percentages for the counties developed for large plantations along the Missouri river. New Madrid County, along the Mississippi River south of St. Louis, also had a high percentage of African slaves, but was not considered part of the region.