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The Visitors Chapel AME is a historic church building at 319 Church Street in Hot Springs, Arkansas.It is a Three story brick building, designed in a distinctive combination of Classical and Gothic Revival styles by J.H. Northington and built in 1913.
The Whittington Park Historic District encompasses a mainly residential area in northwestern Hot Springs, Arkansas. The district is centered on Whittington Park, a landscaped design of Frederick Law Olmsted built in the 1890s by the National Park Service. The park is lined to the north and south by a neighborhood built out in two phases, 1920 ...
Hot Spring County Courthouse: Hot Spring County Courthouse: November 7, 1996 : 210 Locust St. Malvern: 13: Hot Springs Railroad Roundhouse: Hot Springs Railroad Roundhouse: May 29, 2003 : 132 Front St.
The Arkansas Alligator Farm and Petting Zoo is a privately owned zoo located on Whittington Avenue in Hot Springs, Arkansas. [2] The farm houses but does not raise alligators and has done so since it was founded in 1902. [3] The farm includes a small museum with a collection of mounted alligators, a souvenir shop but there’s no snack bar.
Blakely House is a dogtrot house located on Arkansas Highway 84 in Social Hill, Arkansas. Greenberry Blakely, one of the first settlers of Hot Spring County, built the house in 1874. The two-room log house is representative of Arkansas homes at the time, as dogtrot houses were popular in the state during the late 1800s.
Hell's Half Acre is an area of exposed rocks and boulders in a clearing near Hot Springs, ArkansasIn the 1870s there was a hotel nearby and guests would walk a trail to see the site, often referred to as a "bottomless pit". [1]
The building's huge size, Spanish-Colonial Revival style, and placement at the terminus of the town's most important vista made the building a key Hot Springs landmark. The original site became a park at the north end of Bathhouse Row. [5] In the 1930s, the Arlington Hotel was a favorite vacation spot for Al Capone at room 443. The whole floor ...
An elevated pedestrian bridge joins the main hotel to the bathhouse, across Oriole Street. The hotel was built in 1950 by Vance Bryan to a design by local architect Irven McDaniel, and is a rare surviving example of a 1950s hotel in Hot Springs. [2] The building now houses a senior living facility known as the Garland Towers.