Dykes was born in Pleasant Hill in Sabine Parish in northwestern Louisiana to David L. Dykes, Sr. (1883–1964) and the former Ruby Perley (1896–1944).
Born in a sawmill camp known as Yellow Pine, near Many, Sabine Parish, Louisiana, Gossett moved to Texas in 1908 with his parents, who settled on a farm near Henrietta, Clay County.
Licensed to Many, Louisiana, USA, the station serves Sabine Parish and surrounding areas from a studio located in Many, Louisiana.
parish | Parish | Pembroke Parish | Parish (Catholic Church) | Devonshire Parish | Webster Parish | St Marylebone Parish Church | Sabine Baring-Gould | Claiborne Parish | St. James Parish, Louisiana | St. George's Parish, Bermuda | Rapides Parish | Warwick Parish | St. Landry Parish, Louisiana | Saint Andrew Parish, Jamaica | Parish councils in England | Paget Parish | Jefferson Parish | Terrebonne Parish | St. Landry Parish | Sandys Parish | Bienville Parish, Louisiana | Acadia Parish | Vermilion Parish, Louisiana | St. Mary Parish, Louisiana | St. James Parish | St. George's Parish | Saint Mary Parish, Jamaica | Sabine | Rapides Parish, Louisiana |
In 1901, Moore organized the Sabine Lumber Company in Zwolle, a community in Sabine Parish.
In January of 2014, the ACLU filed suit against the Sabine Parish School Board, Superintendent Sara Erarb, Principal Gene Wright and teacher Rita Roark of Negreet High School, alleging officials at one of its schools harassed a sixth-grader because of his Buddhist faith and that the district routinely pushes Christian beliefs upon their students.